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BIPOC Reading Series – March

Tue, Mar 25, 2025 from 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm PDT
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Hosted by Kyle Yoshioka and Jessica Meza-Torres, this monthly reading series is intended to prioritize the safety, creativity, and stories of Black people, Indigenous people, and People of Color.

Featured readers for March: Daphne Kauahi’ilani Jenkins and Tieara Myers.

This event is open to everyone, but only people who identify as Black, Indigenous, and/or People of Color will be invited to read. If you have any questions, please contact Jessica Meza-Torres at jmezatorres24@gmail.com or Kyle Yoshioka at kyle.yoshioka@gmail.com.

Jessica Meza-Torres

Jessica Meza-Torres

Jessica Meza-Torres is from San Jose, CA. She is a co-host at the BIPOC Reading Series, sometimes writer, sometimes designer, and always Mexican. She writes about the light at the end of the tunnel.
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Kyle Yoshioka

Kyle Yoshioka

Kyle Yoshioka thinks and writes a lot about belonging. He is the founder and editorial director of Provecho, a publication about the intersection of food and identity, and co-hosts the BIPOC Reading Series at Literary Arts. His writing projects have been supported by the Independent Publishing Resource Center, the McCormack Writing Center Workshop (formerly the Tin House Workshop), and the Andy Warhol Foundation's Precipice Fund. Kyle is working on his debut novel about a multigenerational Japanese American family that explores whether inheritance is destiny.

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Daphne Kauahi’ilani Jenkins

Daphne Kauahi’ilani Jenkins

Daphne Kauahi’ilani Jenkins is Portland-based multidisciplinary artist, writer and home-baker who explores themes of identity and belonging as a mixed Kanaka ‘Ōiwi wahine born and raised in Hawai’i, now living in the diaspora. Through her work, she expresses her deep love and longing for her homeland of Hawai’i while granting herself permission to embrace diasporic influences and joyful play. Whether baking butter mochi, writing, or making lei, she tires to make a home away from homeland and create contexts for her own belonging. It is important to her to recognize the artistry in everyday cultural practices that affirm who she is. He Hawai’i au - I am Hawai’i. Haku au. I am a maker. Time, beauty, longing, and devotion are recurring organizing principles in her work. Her work aims to disrupt the mainstream media constructs of “Hawaii” by leveraging delight and deliciousness to add nuance, depth and complexity to understandings about Hawai’i.
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Tieara Myers

Tieara Myers

Tieara Myers (she/her) is a BIPOC, Queer, and polyamorous writer, primarily focused on fiction, poetry, prose and short stories. She also explores non-fiction to process experiences of heartbreak, love, sexual desire, and family trauma. Writing since the age of 10, she aims to be provocative and impactful. In 2024, she began a science fiction novel about supernatural conflict and personal transformation. Her work has been featured in a short play in Chicago, IL, and she has performed at various shows and open mics. She plans to resume performing in Portland, OR. Tieara hopes her writing evokes emotions, memories, and desires in her audience.  Currently, she balances her creative work with marketing and spiritual teachings as a meditation instructor. She is excited to return to her roots and explore her creative passions. Find her work at www.tiearamyers.com/writer.
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