Aubrey Hirsch

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Aubrey Hirsch is a writer and illustrator from Cleveland, Ohio, who has published personal essays and comics in the New York Times, Time Magazine, Vox, The Nib, and elsewhere.[1][2][3][4] She published a short story collection, Why We Never Talk About Sugar, in 2013, and her essays and stories have been published in anthologies and collections, including Roxane Gay's Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture, Ways of Reading: An Anthology for Writers, and Pittsburgh Noir.[5][6][7] Hirsch is a 2022 National Endowment for the Arts Fellow in Creative Writing and a 2022 Sustainable Arts Foundation award winner for graphic memoir.[8][9][10]

Hirsch's essays and comics explore gender equality, parenting, sexuality, friendship, public health, and other social equity issues.[11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21] She has written about being subjected to threats and internet harassment because of her public feminism and advocacy for marginalized communities.[22][23][24]

References

  1. Hirsch, Aubrey (October 10, 2014). "In Matters of the Heart, We're in This Together". The New York Times.
  2. "Aubrey Hirsch". Time.
  3. "Search - Vox". www.vox.com.
  4. "Aubrey Hirsch". The Nib.
  5. "'Why We Never Talk About Sugar': A story collection explores relationships without the sugar coating". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  6. "Column: Why this wasn't just another week on the #MeToo front lines". San Diego Union-Tribune. May 4, 2018.
  7. "Ways of Reading, 12th Edition | Macmillan Learning for Instructors". www.macmillanlearning.com.
  8. "Aubrey Hirsch".
  9. "Here are the 2022 National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellows". January 11, 2022.
  10. "Sustainable Arts Foundation". www.sustainableartsfoundation.org.
  11. "Women's Health Isn't Taken As Seriously As Men's, So One Artist Is Speaking Out". HuffPost UK. August 1, 2017.
  12. "Online Fiction: Interview with Aubrey Hirsch -". October 3, 2011.
  13. "Smoking With Aubrey Hirsch". SmokeLong Quarterly.
  14. Gay, Roxane (February 8, 2011). "Ask The Author: Aubrey Hirsch".
  15. ""Less of a Victim and More of a Perpetrator": An Interview with Aubrey Hirsch". The Rupture.
  16. Brabaw, Kasandra. "This Comic Nails The Truth About Women's Experience With Doctors". www.refinery29.com.
  17. http://feministing.com/2017/07/31/quick-hit-powerful-comic-documents-sexism-in-medicine/
  18. Nierenberg, Amelia; Pasick, Adam (September 25, 2020). "Young People Are Spreading the Virus". The New York Times.
  19. Hirsch, Aubrey (December 9, 2020). "How the pandemic is forcing women out of the workforce, explained in a comic". Vox.
  20. https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/22827789/welcome-to-the-fads-issue-of-the-highlight, https://www.inverse.com/mind-body/men-postpartum-depression-anxiety
  21. "This Artist Nails How the Pandemic Has Impacted Women". Motherly. July 14, 2021.
  22. "That's How It Works When You're a Woman on the Internet". lyz.substack.com.
  23. Hirsch, Aubrey. "How to Be a Woman on the Internet". audacity.substack.com.
  24. Hirsch, Aubrey (June 7, 2021). "Forever Alone". The Nib.

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