

Dr. Meg Day
Dr. Meg Day
Meg Day, a poet and author of the award-winning 鈥淟ast Psalm at Sea Level,鈥 will present a craft talk on Wednesday, April 7, and a poetry reading on Thursday, April 8, both at 7 p.m., via Zoom, as part of the Mary Louise White Visiting Writers Series.
An assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at Franklin & Marshall College, Dr. Day identifies as genderqueer and deaf, which both play into their poetry, especially in a series of self portraits in 鈥淟ast Psalm at Sea Level.鈥
鈥淲e are not static beings,鈥 Day was quoted as saying in an interview. 鈥淚 think of a self-portrait as trying to find the right title for yourself: what lens can I look through to be sure that I see myself right.鈥
Day also explores deaf identity, sometimes in poems that feature erasures or redactions. Day鈥檚 poems are powerfully image-driven, frequently focused on poetic forms, and in many cases written as both personal testimony and as advocacy, said Department of English Assistant Professor Michael Sheehan.
Day鈥檚 work explores identity and the change inherent to it, connection to and distance from others, and interrogates the idea of 鈥渁 wrong body,鈥 both in terms of disability and gender identity, Mr. Sheehan explained.
As Day shared in another interview, 鈥渉ow could you have a body that is wrong? I can imagine being unhappy with your body, I鈥檝e been there. I can imagine being afraid of your body, I鈥檝e been there. I can imagine wanting your body to change, or be different in many ways. But wrong is such a projection from the culture in a way that I think is so scary and damaging. It implies that others know better than you do about what your body should be.鈥
For both the craft talk and the reading, Day will be joined by an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter, Emily Phipps, to help ensure accessibility.
Day has a Ph.D. in Literature and Creative Writing, with an emphasis on disability poetics, from the University of Utah, a M.F.A. from Mills College and a B.A. from the University of California, San Diego.
鈥淟ast Psalm at Sea Level鈥 won the Barrow Street Press Poetry Prize and the Publishing Triangle鈥檚 2015 Audre Lorde Award. Day is also the author of two award-winning chapbooks: 鈥淲hen All You Have is a Hammer鈥 and 鈥淲e Can鈥檛 Read This.鈥
The craft talk can be accessed , and the poetry reading can be accessed as well.
The Mary Louise White Visiting Writers Series is supported by the Mary Louise White Endowment established through the Fredonia College Foundation.