In “Stumbling over History,” Kenny’s essay published by Craft, he writes: “There is a Jewish saying that you die twice. You die once when you die, and again when your name is no longer spoken.” Read the essay, which was once the beginning of Kenny’s forthcoming book, Stumbling over History: Disability and the Holocaust, here.
Read More“Disability Futures in the Arts," is a series of essays curated, edited, and introduced by Kenny. Over the next 3 years, Wordgathering will publish 15 essays by disabled writers and artists working in different media. The first cohort of 5 essays is now published! Read and/or listen to Kenny's series introduction and essays by Chun-shan (Sandie) Yi, Travis Chi Wing Lau, Sandra Alland, Jerron Herman, and Noa Winter here.
Read MoreOn the Fulbright Forward podcast episode “Disability and Eugenics Discourse,” Kenny talks with Fulbright EUR Diversity Coordinator Susanne Hamscha about disabiity and eugenics during the Third Reich, when disabled people were systematically murdered in the Aktion T4 program. But eugenic discourses are alive and well, as Kenny explains with reference to the COVID-19 pandemic. Listen here.
Read More“Access in Content and Form,” a Creative Capital conversation between Kenny and filmmaker/visual artist Alison O’Daniel is now online! As artists who identify as disabled, Kenny and Alison know the importance of access to buildings, sound, films, books, websites and, especially during the current pandemic, protection and care. However, what is most important to their practices is work that focuses on disability in both content and form. Kenny and Alison talk about how their intersectional identities enter their work, the importance of disability representation and role models, and their upcoming creative collaboration on a film based on Kenny’s poem sequence In the Gardens of Japan. The event has ASL interpretation and live-captioning.
Read MoreKenny’s reading with Jayrôme C. Robinet, part of “Queer as German Folk,” a project “celebrating the multilayered histories of Germany’s and America’s diverse LGBTIQ+ communities” is now online. Goethe-Institut in North America in collaboration with its Goethe Pop Ups and the Schwules Museum Berlin (SMU) were hosts for the event, which was moderated by Dr. Robert D. Tobin, Henry J. Leir Chair in Foreign Languages and Cultures at Clark University.
Read MoreIn “Without Us: Disabled Writers 30 Years after the ADA", Kenny writes “Despite the essential need for disabled writers to transform the understanding of disability and disabled lives, in the thirty years since the ADA’s passage, in literary circles, there remains a lack of representation of disabled people in gatekeeper positions and in our literature’s pages.” Read the full essay here.
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