Search results
Susan Eisenberg is a poet, visual artist, and oral historian who works within and across genres. Her work re-imagines the everyday, playing with scale and juxtaposition to investigate issues of power and social policy. ENR Viewpoint: Gender Equity Still is an Industry Renovation Project. “Keep Out”. https://onequalter.ms. 2021 14th St, NW,
- Books
Susan Eisenberg is the poet laureate of the labor movement....
- Poetry
a transformer, high voltage, placing the cutters. in her...
- Visual Arts
The ON EQUAL TERMS Project, directed by Susan Eisenberg,...
- News & Media
Alexis Herman, Secretary, Department of Labor and Author...
- About
About. Born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, Susan Eisenberg...
- Contact
Susan Eisenberg is available for poetry readings, workshops,...
- Susan Eisenberg Biography
A multidisciplinary artist and educator, Susan Eisenberg...
- Books
Susan Eisenberg is a poet, visual artist, and oral historian who works within and across genres. She is the author of the poetry collections Stanley's Girl (2018) and Pioneering: Poems from the Construction Site (1998), and the prose book We'll Call You If We Need You: Experiences of Women Working Construction (2018).
People also ask
Who is Susan Eisenberg?
Where did Elizabeth Eisenberg go to college?
When did Elizabeth Eisenberg become an electrician?
Susan Eisenberg is a poet, visual artist, and oral historian who works within and across genres. She is the author of the poetry collections Stanley's Girl (2018) and Pioneering: Poems from the Construction Site (1998), and the prose book We'll Call You If We Need...
Susan Eisenberg is a poet, visual artist, and oral historian, who works within and across genres. Introduced to the craft of engaged poetry by Denise Levertov in the mid-1970s, her essay about that mentorship appears in Denise Levertov, In Company.
Susan Eisenberg Artist Statement: Susan Eisenberg is a poet, visual artist, oral historian, and licensed electrician who works within and across genres. Her fourth poetry book, Perpetual Care (2016), combines poems with fine art photographs to explore chronic illness. Among the first women in the country to complete a