Kinsale Hueston uses poetry to explore her Native identity (via Yale Daily News)

Full Title: “Kinsale Hueston ’22 B.A. uses poetry to explore her Native identity (via Yale Daily News)”

Her grandmother is a recurring figure in Kinsale Hueston’s poetry. In “squashblossom,” the narrator kisses her departed grandmother’s forehead during the funeral ceremony “to whisper her to sleep.” In “Grandmother,” she struggles to accept her grandmother’s declining health. Hueston, a first-year at Yale College, writes: “Through her gray crown, she cannot hear me; she floats back to Grandfather, nali, adeezhi.” The focus on her grandmother has given Hueston a way to explore her Navajo culture and her connection to her Indigenous roots.

My grandmother has the biggest impact on my poetry,” says Hueston, a 2017 National Student Poet who is featured as one of 34 “People Changing How We See Our World” in TIME Magazine’s February 2019 issue on “The Art of Optimism.”“She was the strongest figure in my life. My mom talked about her all the time. She was the first person we saw whenever we visited the reservation.”

Hueston’s voice cracks when she talks about losing her grandmother a year and a half ago, just as her poetry was gaining recognition. “She had all these stories she told me,” Hueston says. “She had a way of living and persevering.”

Hueston was raised in Orange County, California, one of the only Native Americans in her peer group. As she began to explore her Native heritage in high school —and gather family stories — she felt more drawn to her Native identity but also more separate from her classmates. Poetry helped her to bridge the gap. “Poetry was a healing mechanism,” Hueston says, “and it was also a way to inform my classmates and community in California about my culture.”

She was soon drawn to the activist community in Los Angeles, and found that there, too, she could use poetry to address issues affecting contemporary Indigenous people, including poverty, racism, and exploitation. She began to research more, so she could have the facts at hand, but never lost the personal narrative. “It’s easier to connect with an audience when you’re baring your soul,” she says.

Click here for more information.

Links:

Yale Daily News | Kinsale Hueston

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s