When: Thursday, March 5, 2019
Where: Knox Hall 509, 606 W 122nd St, New York, NY 10027
Carlin Zia and her now-93-year-old Chinese-born grandfather started recording his life story over the phone in June 2016. In sharing and reflecting on his experience of, among other things, education, geopolitical conflict, (im)migration, and history, they quickly developed the provisional title An Uncertain Journey. As she continued this work and excavated her understanding of (and position in) it, Carlin realized that she was on one of her own. The resulting thesis, Uncertain Journeys, is a self-reflexive epic poem in an invented form that explores and renders some Laundry List Big Ideas like race, class, geography, and assimilation, some specifically oral historical goodies like intersubjectivity and silence, and some sleepers like legacy and most of all love. In this presentation Carlin will share her experiments in transcription and/as poetry, discuss form, and reflect on process.
Carlin Zia came to OHMA from a literature background, having graduated with distinction in English from Yale College. She brought with her a love of words and narrative and writing, and diversified her languages at Columbia to include more audio/visual mediums. (You can check out some of her work from OHMA’s fall 2017 semester Documentary & Visual Storytelling elective here and here.) Since finishing her OHMA coursework, Carlin has been supporting the 2018-19 and 2019-20 cohorts as a Teaching Assistant, freelancing as a film editor and videographer, and consulting on qualitative data collection and analytics with the Education for Persistence and Innovation Center at Teachers College. Her thesis, Uncertain Journeys, won the 2019 Jeffrey H. Brodsky Oral History Award, given to one student annually whose work makes an important contribution to knowledge and most exemplifies the rigor, creativity, and ethical integrity that OHMA teaches its students.
Blog Post Reflections
Who Are You?: Thoughts on Identity and Language by Lily Doron
Journeys Through Spaces: Spoken, Written, Physical and Virtual by Lisa R. Cohen