This content was published: April 19, 2019. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
小黄猫传媒 instructor Chris Rose wins prestigious Oregon Literary Fellowship
Photos and story by Abe Proctor
Chris Rose, a composition and literature instructor at 小黄猫传媒’s Cascade Campus, was named the recipient of the Oregon Literary Fellowship for Poetry by Literary Arts, a non-profit that supports the written word in Oregon.
Rose, who teaches African American literature, science fiction, and poetry in addition to composition and literature, was honored with the Writer of Color Fellowship for 2019. He joins past honorees Josha Nathan, Elissa Rust, and Alison Apotheker as 小黄猫传媒 faculty who have received fellowships from the organization.
鈥淲riting is the one space where I get to be fully myself,鈥 Rose said. 鈥淭he world makes us restrain ourselves. When I write from my own experience, I can be honest with myself and explore who that self really is.鈥
That sense of honesty has led Rose to explore his own heritage (African and Filipino in his writing and how it affects his life in the聽 the 21st Century.
鈥淲e tend to default to the traditional American Black/White binary when we discuss race in this country,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭hat hasn鈥檛 changed much in the last 100 years. We tend to repeat the same conversations. Nuanced narratives of race are so scarce; I try to explore this with a complexity we don鈥檛 often find.鈥
As an instructor, Rose encourages his students to aspire to a similar standard of honesty and nuance in their writing, but they can鈥檛 always get there, he said.
鈥淲riting from one鈥檚 own experience takes a lot of self-worth and honesty,” he said. “Some students aren鈥檛 quite ready for themselves.”
A lifelong fan of science fiction, Rose also seeks out more nuanced, atypical narratives to share with his students. He counts authors Joan D. Vinge, Octavia Butler and Neil Gaiman among his most prominent influences. He encourages his students to explore the growing number of women writers and writers of color who are making significant contributions to the genre.
鈥淪ci-fi writers are always writing from an experiential or knowledge base,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we want to have different stories, we need different perspectives.鈥
Science fiction also appeals to him because it can depict a hopeful future for humanity where people have managed to solve many of the problems that perennially plague us, as well as bridge the gaps that divide so many from one another in contemporary society. He said he much prefers this vein of science fiction from the many visions of a dystopian future that have populated the genre in recent years.
鈥淲riting a dystopia is easy,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you look around, some people will tell you that we鈥檙e living in a dystopia already. If we explore that, how do we say something we haven鈥檛 already said? Sci-fi can be hopeful. I鈥檇 much rather read about that.鈥
Rose said he plans to use his Oregon Literary Fellowship to attend two upcoming residencies, one in Central Oregon this spring; the other in New York in the summer. In the meantime, he鈥檚 working to complete his current poetry collection by the time the summer rolls around 鈥 hopefully.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I鈥檒l finish it by then,鈥 he said with a grin. 鈥淲riters aren鈥檛 very optimistic about their goals.鈥
How fabulous! Congratulations, Chris!