Cyrée Jarelle Johnson
Cyrée Jarelle Johnson (born 1990)[1] is an American poet, editor, and librarian. He co-founded the literary magazine Deaf Poets Society and is currently a librarian at Pratt Institute. His debut poetry collection Slingshot received a Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry.[2] Early life and educationJohnson was raised in Piscataway, New Jersey,[3] and grew up a household he described as "abusive".[2] He received his bachelor's degree from Hampshire College and completed his MFA in creative writing at Columbia University in 2019.[3][4] Johnson was diagnosed with autism when he was about four years old[5] and with lupus in college.[6] He stated in an interview for Mashable, "Autism scholarship characterizes folks on the spectrum as 'black and white thinkers' — and that's quite true for me. What I love, I love with verve and fervor. What I hate, I hate with verve and fervor."[5] CareerJohnson is co-founder and poetry editor of Deaf Poets Society literary magazine, which was created in 2016 to specifically center works by writers with disabilities and those who are d/Deaf.[6][1] The magazine was developed with accessibility in mind, such as providing works in various formats including text, audio, and images.[6] Johnson is an assistant professor and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Librarian at Pratt Institute.[3] He is also a former Chapter Lead for Black Lives Matter Philadelphia.[6] He described his work as indirectly addressing disability and "what [he] had to do to stay alive."[1] He published his debut poetry collection Slingshot in 2019 under Nightboat Books.[4] In a New York Times review Stephanie Burt described the collection: "It’s challenging work, in its language, its stories, its subcultural references (“prince died for fem bois”), yet it offers pellucid queer intimacies."[7] Personal lifeJohnson is transmasculine[2] and uses he/him pronouns.[6][8] Johnson is gay.[1] He is married to Azure D Osborne-Lee and they reside in Brooklyn.[2] Accolades
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