In
this Jan. 17, 2015 photo, Claudia Rankine attends the 46th NAACP Image
Awards Nominees' Luncheon in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Rob
Latour/Invision/AP)
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Gene Luen Yang, a
prize-winning author and the national ambassador for young people's literature,
and Claudia Rankine, one of poetry's brightest and most innovative stars, are
among this year's 23 MacArthur fellows and recipients of the so-called
"genius" grants.
Associated
Press report continues:
The
fellows were announced Thursday by the Chicago-based John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation, which gives each honoree US$625,000 over five years to
spend any way he or she pleases, with no strings attached. More than 900 people
have received the grants since 1981, with previous fellows including
"Hamilton" playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda, author-journalist Ta-Nehisi
Coates and dancer-choreographer Merce Cunningham. Fellows, brought to the
foundation's attention by an anonymous pool of nominators, do not apply for the
money and are not informed they've been chosen until shortly before the awards
are announced.
The
idea behind the grants is to give people of "exceptional creativity"
the "flexibility" to further pursue their ideas and projects.
"While
our communities, our nation, and our world face both historic and emerging
challenges, these 23 extraordinary individuals give us ample reason for
hope," MacArthur President Julia Stasch said in a statement. "They
are breaking new ground in areas of public concern, in the arts, and in the
sciences, often in unexpected ways. Their creativity, dedication, and impact
inspire us all."
Yang
is an acclaimed graphic novelist whose books include "American Born
Chinese," which in 2006 became the first novel of its kind to receive a
National Book Award nomination. Earlier this year, he was appointed young
people's literature ambassador by the Library of Congress. In an email to The
Associated Press, he said he hoped the grant money would enable him to have a
private work space. "Practically speaking, I haven't had a studio for a
while now. For the past few years, I've been working at local cafes and from a
corner in my bedroom," he told the AP.
Rankine
is best known for her book-length tapestry of poems, prose and images about
racism, "Citizen: An American Lyric," a 2014 release which won the
National Book Critics Circle prize and several other honors. More than 100,000
copies are in print, a remarkable total for poetry. During a recent telephone
interview, Rankine said she planned to use at least some of the money to open a
performing-creative-educational space in Manhattan that would challenge
"the discourse that created this internalized hierarchy in white
people."
"We
need a space where we can get together and put pressure on the language,"
she said.
The
foundation also selected author Maggie Nelson, New Yorker staff writer Sarah
Stillman, composer Julia Wolfe, theater artist and educator Anne Basting and
playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins.
"I've
had a very fortuitous year and I almost think I've learned the definition of an
embarrassment of riches," Jacobs-Jenkins said Thursday by phone. "I
just feel like I'm in shock and I'm trying to understand what's happening to
me. I'm very happy to have it happen to me, whatever it is."
Just
31, the Princeton-educated Jacobs-Jenkins has made a name for himself as an
inventive theater writer. Two of his works tied for Obie Awards for Best
American Play, and his play "An Octoroon" was finalist for The Edward
M. Kennedy Prize for Drama Inspired by American History.
His
works include "Neighbors," in which a family of minstrels in
blackface moves in next to a contemporary mixed-race family;
"Appropriate," where a white family discovers its racist past; and
"Gloria," about a group of catty editorial assistants at a magazine
whose lives change on a random day.
Jacobs-Jenkins
learned of the MacArthur grant a few weeks ago in a phone call. "I was
convinced I was hallucinating it for a while and then I happened to run into my
college roommate and the street who confirmed to me that there was, in fact, a
phone number in my recent call list," he said.
Others
chosen ranged from financial service innovator Jose A. Quinonez and human
rights attorney Ahilan Arulanantham to linguist Daryl Baldwin and bioengineer
Rebecca Richards-Kortum.
Also announced Thursday were computer scientists Subhash Khot and Bill Thies, synthetic chemist Jin-Quan Yu and biologist-inventor Manu Prakash, microbiologist Dianne Newman and geobiologist Victoria Orphan. Other fellows are sculptor Vincent Fecteau, art historian and curator Kellie Jones, cultural historian Josh Kun, author-writer Lauren Redniss, jewelry maker and sculptor Joyce J. Scott and video artist Mary Reid Kelley.
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