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  1. Janet Sarbanes is the author of the short story collections Army of One and The Protester Has Been Released.The 2017 recipient of a Creative Capital/Andy Warhol art writer’s grant, she has published art criticism and other critical writing in museum catalogues, anthologies, and journals including East of Borneo, Afterall, and the Los Angeles Review of Books.

  2. Janet Sarbanes (Ph.D. UCLA English, B.A. Princeton Comparative Literature) is the author of the short story collections Army of One and The Protester Has Been Released. Her book of essays, Letters on the Autonomy Project, is forthcoming from Punctum Books in 2022. The 2017 recipient of a Creative Capital/Andy Warhol art writer’s grant ...

  3. Janet Sarbanes, an Award-winning author, educator and public intellectual, gracefully agreed to a conversation with me about the place of Greek heritage in her life, work, and politics. Her willingness to explore this topic introduces us to a world of cultural and political commitments rarely acknowledged in the Greek American public sphere. In this respect, her narrative in this interview ...

  4. 12 de jul. de 2018 · Janet Sarbanes: House of Dust began in New York as a computer-generated poem, a collaboration between Alison and composer James Tenney. In 1968, Alison received a Guggenheim fellowship to create a structure inspired by one quatrain of the poem, which was then sited in a Chelsea housing co-op.

  5. 16 de ago. de 2013 · Janet Sarbanes is the author of the short story collection Army of One.She presently serves as Chair of the CalArts MFA Creative Writing Program and on the board of Les Figues Press.

  6. 2 de jun. de 2022 · Janet Sarbanes is the author of the short story collections Army of One and The Protester Has Been Released. The 2017 recipient of a Creative Capital/Andy Warhol art writer’s grant, she has published art criticism and other critical writing in museum catalogues, anthologies, and journals including East of Borneo, Afterall, and the Los Angeles Review of Books .

  7. Autonomy is thus equally a project for thought, for education, for politics, and for art. Stylistically, these open letters, addressed inclusively to artists, activists, and academics, are modeled on the philosophical letters of Friedrich Schiller on the one hand and the revolutionary communiqués of the Zapatistas on the other.