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Rachel Kaufman is a poet, teacher, and PhD candidate in Latin American and Jewish history at UCLA. Her work explores diasporic memory and religious ritual, and her dissertation focuses on the Mexican Inquisition, cross-community networks of female religious transmission, and the conversa home in New Spain.
- Poetry
Published Poetry. Strip my blue house down & Seasons, The...
- Many to Remember
In her debut poetry collection, Rachel Kaufman enters the...
- Poetry
Published Poetry. Strip my blue house down & Seasons, The Dodge, Fall 2024. History untold in moans, About Place Journal, Strange Wests (Black Earth Institute). A thirst for water, set to music by Vera Ivanova, commissioned and premiered by the Pasadena Chorale (May 11, 2024). Hymn, The Journal 46.4 (Collapse: :Rebuild). Translation, Fred & Edith Herman Memorial Prize, Academy of American Poets
In her debut poetry collection, Rachel Kaufman enters the archive’s unconscious to reveal the melodies hidden within the language of the past. Many to Remember unravels the histories of New Mexican crypto-Jews and the Mexican Inquisition alongside the poet’s own family histories.
Rachel Kaufman is a poet and educator pursuing a PhD in Latin American and Jewish history at UCLA. Her poetic and historical work explore diasporic memory and the ways in which literary and historical works transmit the past, and her dissertation focuses on the Mexican Inquisition and cross-ethnic networks of female religious ritual.
2,263 Followers, 2,521 Following, 408 Posts - Rachel Kaufman (@_rachelkaufman) on Instagram: "@rachelkaufmanlaw @caninecellmates atlanta, ga ⚖️🔯🪬🐾💡🌱🧿☮️"
Tomorrow’s Women was co-founded in 2003 by humanitarian Rachel Kaufman, artist/filmmaker Debra Sugerman, and peace activist/writer Anael Harpaz.
20 lis 2020 · by Rachel Kaufman. Break slate. Break marble. Break bread over the sink. Break chimes, break glass, break time in pieces like fingernails. Break blades of grass, break glory (don’t laugh). Break the oven and burn the toast. Break a person and watch it melt. (The breaking is it.) Break a ceramic plate, break the broom, break the dustpan, watch ...