Briallen Hopper

Last updated
Briallen Hopper
Education University of Puget Sound (BA)
Princeton University (PhD)
Yale University (MDiv) (dropped out)
Occupation(s) Author, professor, essayist

Briallen Hopper is an American author, writer, columnist, and literary critic. She is the author of the Bloomsbury collection Hard to Love: Essays and Confessions (2019). Her work has been published in Vox , The Yale Review , The Washington Post , New York Magazine , and other publications. [1] [2] [3] Hopper's Curbed column, "House Rules," covered topics such as mental health, culture, and community during the COVID-19 pandemic. [4]

Contents

Hopper is an associate professor in the English department and co-director of the MFA Program at Queens College, CUNY, where she teaches non-fiction, public writing, protest prose, and editorial practices. She is the U.S. representative and contributing editor on And Other Stories [5] and serves as editor-in-chief of online religion and culture literary magazine, Killing The Buddha. [6] [7] Hopper's essay, "Young Adult Cancer Story," [8] remains the most-viewed piece in the history of the Los Angeles Review of Books .

She teaches Writing About Family at Yale University. [9]

Early life

Briallen Hopper grew up as one of six siblings [10] in an evangelical Christian household. [11] As a teenager she loved 19th-century novels by women, including authors like Louisa May Alcott, George Eliot, the Bronte sisters, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell: "They all write so intensely about young women becoming adults and I took it all to heart." [12]

Hopper began her higher education at Tacoma Community College, where she also began teaching, tutoring English and ESL as a work-study job. [12] She transferred to the University of Puget Sound, graduating summa cum laude in English and History. [13] She earned a PhD from Princeton in 2008. [14] Following her PhD, Hopper became a full-time lecturer and University Church Faculty Fellow at Yale University. [15]

Career

While earning her PhD, Hopper taught in the Princeton English Department as a Quin Morton Teaching Fellow, where she won an APGA Teaching Award with the Princeton Writing Program for her classes on "American Short Fiction" and "African American Satire." [16] Princeton Writing Program Director Kerry Walk said of Hopper, “Briallen is a teacher whose greatest gift is to inspire students to take their thinking and writing to the next level -- and then to the level beyond that one.” [16]

Following her PhD, Hopper enrolled at Yale Divinity School [14] where the 2008 academic hiring freeze made securing full-time academic posts newly difficult. [17] The experience of writing sermons as a preacher [18] encouraged her to experiment with writing for a broad audience ("written for actual people, not for someone on JSTOR in seven years,”) and Hopper began writing popular essays, [14] published in the Huffington Post and the Los Angeles Review of Books . [17] In 2011, she left divinity school but remained a preacher [19] and professor with the Yale English Department, teaching creative writing while serving on Yale's Advisory Committee for Diversity and Faculty Development . [15] Hopper was subsequently hired by the English Department at Queens College, CUNY, where she is an associate professor of writing and co-director of the MFA Program. [20] [21] She has been teaching creative writing with the Yale Prison Education Initiative (YPEI) since 2020. [22]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Hopper's Curbed advice column "House Rules" was acquired by New York Magazine , covering topics such as mental health, remote work, and home culture during lockdown. [4] [23] In 2022, Hopper's essay "Sex and the Single Frump" was published in Harper Perennial feminist anthology, Sex and the Single Woman: 24 Writers Reimagine Helen Gurley Brown's Cult Classic (2022). [24] [25] [26] Later that year, her essay "Everybody’s Protest Essay: Personal Protest Prose on the American Internet" was published in The Edinburgh Companion to the Essay (2022) as part of Edinburgh University Press' series, Edinburgh Companions to Literature and the Humanities. [27] [28] [29]

Hard to Love

In 2019, Hopper published a collection of 21 essays on relationships entitled Hard to Love: Essays and Confessions. [10] Writing in the Observer, Lauren LeBlanc called Hard to Love "an incredibly thoughtful examination of the various ways we depend upon others, through an expansive and engaging look at love outside a traditional romantic sphere." [17] Rejecting the "single versus partner binary" as the primary question of relationships, Hopper's book instead focuses, in LeBlanc's description, on "the unsung ways that we support and encourage one another." [17] Hopper discusses Spinsterhood, [30] Ivy League sperm banks, online dating, caring for a friend going through chemotherapy, the possibility of single motherhood, and her response to the 2018 Women's March, among other topics relating to relationships outside of romantic partnership. [17] [31]

Publishers Weekly praised Hopper's style as "a voice that is sophisticated and analytical, but also earnest and eager". [32] In the Los Angeles Review of Books , Ellen Wayland-Smith wrote that "what Hopper does so artfully in her work is to disrupt the foregone narrative conclusions imposed on American women," turning away (if not initially by choice) from the "plot-driven love — clocks both nuptial and biological — Hopper learned to let herself float in the immediacy and plotlessness of her friendships." [10] Kirkus Reviews named it a Best Memoir of the Year [33] and CBC named it a Best International Nonfiction Book of the Year. [34]

Other writing

In March of 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Hopper wrote about living conditions in her home of Elmhurst, Queens, a blue-collar neighborhood devastated by the virus. Her essay, "Sirenland," was published as part of The Yale Review's "Pandemic Files", [2] an ongoing series chronicling the pandemic crisis. In the essay, Hopper (who lives beside Elmhurst Hospital) details her view of the outbreak from the "center of the center" of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York, watching refrigerator trucks turn into makeshift roaming morgues [35] [36] and watching the state itself become the epicenter of the global pandemic. [37] The essay was eventually published as part of Meghan O'Rourke’s collection, A WorldOut of Reach: Dispatches from Life Under Lockdown. [38]

Following praise from John Green, Hopper's essay, "Young Adult Cancer Story," a review of The Fault in Our Stars, became the most-viewed essay in the history of the Los Angeles Review of Books . [39]

Bibliography

Books

Essays


Related Research Articles

bell hooks American author and activist (1952–2021)

Gloria Jean Watkins, better known by her pen name bell hooks, was an American author, theorist, educator, and social critic who was a Distinguished Professor in Residence at Berea College. She was best known for her writings on race, feminism, and class. She used the lower-case spelling of her name to decenter herself and draw attention to her work instead. The focus of hooks' writing was to explore the intersectionality of race, capitalism, and gender, and what she described as their ability to produce and perpetuate systems of oppression and class domination. She published around 40 books, including works that ranged from essays, poetry, and children's books. She published numerous scholarly articles, appeared in documentary films, and participated in public lectures. Her work addressed love, race, social class, gender, art, history, sexuality, mass media, and feminism.

<i>Sexual Personae</i> 1990 book by Camille Paglia

Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson is a 1990 work about sexual decadence in Western literature and the visual arts by scholar Camille Paglia, in which she addresses major artists and writers such as Donatello, Sandro Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Emily Brontë, and Oscar Wilde. Following Friedrich Nietzsche, Paglia argues that the primary conflict in Western culture is between the binary forces of the Apollonian and Dionysian, Apollo being associated with order, symmetry, culture, rationality, and sky, and Dionysus with disorder, chaos, nature, emotion, and earth. The book became a bestseller, and was praised by numerous literary critics, although it also received critical reviews from numerous feminist scholars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helen Gurley Brown</span> American author, publisher, and businesswoman

Helen Gurley Brown was an American author, publisher, and businesswoman. She was the editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan magazine for 32 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise Glück</span> American poet and Nobel laureate (1943–2023)

Louise Elisabeth Glück was an American poet and essayist. She won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature, whose judges praised "her unmistakable poetic voice that with austere beauty makes individual existence universal". Her other awards include the Pulitzer Prize, National Humanities Medal, National Book Award, National Book Critics Circle Award, and Bollingen Prize. From 2003 to 2004, she was Poet Laureate of the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siri Hustvedt</span> American novelist, essayist, poet (born 1955)

Siri Hustvedt is an American novelist and essayist. Hustvedt is the author of a book of poetry, seven novels, two books of essays, and several works of non-fiction. Her books include The Blindfold (1992), The Enchantment of Lily Dahl (1996), What I Loved (2003), for which she is best known, A Plea for Eros (2006), The Sorrows of an American (2008), The Shaking Woman or A History of My Nerves (2010), The Summer Without Men (2011), Living, Thinking, Looking (2012), The Blazing World (2014), and Memories of the Future (2019). What I Loved and The Summer Without Men were international bestsellers. Her work has been translated into over thirty languages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marilynne Robinson</span> American novelist and essayist (born 1943)

Marilynne Summers Robinson is an American novelist and essayist. Across her writing career, Robinson has received numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2005, National Humanities Medal in 2012, and the 2016 Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction. In 2016, Robinson was named in Time magazine's list of 100 most influential people. Robinson began teaching at the Iowa Writers' Workshop in 1991 and retired in the spring of 2016.

<i>Sex and the Single Girl</i> Book by Helen Gurley Brown

Sex and the Single Girl is a 1962 non-fiction book by American writer Helen Gurley Brown, written as an advice book that encouraged women to become financially independent and experience sexual relationships before or without marriage. The book sold two million copies in three weeks, was sold in 35 countries and has made the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times and Time bestseller lists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sonnet 35</span> Poem by William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare's Sonnet 35 is part of the Fair Youth sequence, commonly agreed to be addressed to a young man; more narrowly, it is part of a sequence running from 33 to 42, in which the speaker considers a sin committed against him by the young man, which the speaker struggles to forgive.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nell Irvin Painter</span> American historian (born 1942)

Nell Irvin Painter is an American historian notable for her works on United States Southern history of the nineteenth century. She is retired from Princeton University as the Edwards Professor of American History Emerita. She has served as president of the Organization of American Historians and as president of the Southern Historical Association, and was appointed as chair of MacDowell's board of directors in 2020.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aminatta Forna</span> Scottish writer

Aminatta Forna, OBE, is a British writer of Scottish and Sierra Leonean ancestry. Her first book was a memoir, The Devil That Danced on the Water: A Daughter's Quest (2002). Since then she has written four novels: Ancestor Stones (2006), The Memory of Love (2010), The Hired Man (2013) and Happiness (2018). In 2021 she published a collection of essays, The Window Seat: Notes from a Life in Motion. (2021), which was a new genre for her.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leslie Jamison</span> American novelist and essayist

Leslie Sierra Jamison is an American novelist and essayist. She is the author of the 2010 novel The Gin Closet and the 2014 essay collection The Empathy Exams. Jamison also directs the nonfiction concentration in writing at Columbia University School of the Arts.

Audrey Bilger is the 16th and current president of Reed College. She is former vice president and dean of the college at Pomona College and previously was a professor of literature and faculty director of the Center for Writing and Public Discourse at Claremont McKenna College.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claire Vaye Watkins</span> American author and academic (born 1984)

Claire Vaye Watkins is an American author and academic.

Helen Anne Molesworth is an American curator of contemporary art based in Los Angeles. From 2014 to 2018, she was the Chief Curator at The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Virginia Jackson</span>

Virginia Walker Jackson is UCI Endowed Chair in Rhetoric at the University of California, Irvine. She is one of the founders of historical poetics and of the new lyric studies, and is credited with "energiz[ing] criticism" about Emily Dickinson in the twenty-first century. She is more recently credited with revising the racialized history of American poetics, as the poet Terrance Hayes writes, “If there is a kind of ‘poet’s poet,’ might there also be a kind of ‘poet’s scholar,’ someone a poet reads for lucid, explosive doses of insight and history? Yes: Virginia Jackson. Actually, she’s more than a poet’s favorite scholar, she is a poet’s favorite pathfinding detective. Her brilliant Before Modernism is a radical reorientation of American lyric literary assumptions. Virginia Jackson unearths the overlooked, undervalued Black poets at the root of modern American poetry, and every branch of contemporary poetry trembles with new fruit.” Her research includes nineteenth-century American poetry, the history of American poetry, comparative literature, lyric theory, the history of criticism, the history of poetics, and genre theory.

Alexandra Lange is an American architecture and design critic and author based in New York. The author of a series of critically acclaimed books, Lange is the architecture critic for Curbed. She has bylines published in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Atlantic, Metropolis, Architect magazine, Architectural Digest; Architectural Record, The Architect’s Newspaper, Cite; Domus; Domino; Dwell; GOOD; Icon, The Nation, New York magazine, Places Journal, Print and Slate. Lange is a Loeb Fellow, and her work has been recognized through a number of awards, including the 2019 Steven Heller Prize for Cultural Commentary.

Aria Aber is an American poet and writer based in Los Angeles, California.

Nyasha Junior is an American biblical scholar. Her research focuses on the connections between religion, race, and gender within the Hebrew Bible. She holds a PhD from Princeton Theological Seminary. She was associate professor at Temple University before moving to the University of Toronto in the department for the Study of Religion. She was a visiting associate professor and research associate at Harvard Divinity School for the 2020–21 academic year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Divya Victor</span> Poet

Divya Victor is a Tamil American poet and professor, known for her poetry book Curb which won the PEN Open Book Award.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Minda Honey</span> American author

Minda Honey is an American author and columnist, she is best known for her debut novel, The Heartbreak Years.

References

  1. "Perspective | Single women looking to extend their fertility usually freeze eggs. I froze embryos. Here's why". Washington Post. May 10, 2019. ISSN   0190-8286 . Retrieved October 27, 2023.
  2. 1 2 "Briallen Hopper: "Sirenland"". The Yale Review.
  3. Hopper, Briallen (February 26, 2016). "Relying on Friendship in a World Made for Couples". The Cut.
  4. 1 2 "House Rules - Curbed". archive.curbed.com.
  5. "About us".
  6. "KtBniks". Killing the Buddha. Retrieved December 17, 2020.
  7. Wadhwani, Sita (March 11, 2010). "Killing the Buddha: Online religion magazine". CNN Travel. Retrieved December 17, 2020.
  8. "Los Angeles Review of Books". Los Angeles Review of Books. July 16, 2014.
  9. https://summer.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/Syllabi/2023/ENGL%20S256.pdf [ bare URL PDF ]
  10. 1 2 3 Wayland-Smith, Ellen (May 9, 2019). "Treasures on Earth and in Heaven: On Briallen Hopper's "Hard to Love"". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
  11. Martin, Kristen (February 11, 2019). "Marriage Isn't the Only Plot for Love". Literary Hub. Retrieved November 29, 2020.
  12. 1 2 Yuen, Angela (September 27, 2015). "An Interview With Briallen Hopper". Margins Magazine. Retrieved November 28, 2020.
  13. Shine, Jacqui (March 23, 2019). ""Love," "Family," and Other Homonyms: A Conversation with Briallen Hopper". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  14. 1 2 3 "Briallen Hopper *08 Reads from New Essay Collection | Department of English". english.princeton.edu. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  15. 1 2 "Advisory Committee for Diversity and Faculty Development | Faculty of Arts and Sciences". fas.yale.edu.
  16. 1 2 MacPherson, Kitta (May 30, 2008). "Graduate students lauded as excellent teachers". Princeton University. Retrieved October 13, 2023.
  17. 1 2 3 4 5 LeBlanc, Lauren (February 13, 2019). "This Bracing, Necessary Book About the Value of Love Without Romance Is Perfectly Timed". Observer. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
  18. "October 10, 2010 Sermon at Yale University Church" via www.youtube.com.
  19. "UCY Sermon - Resurrection in Pandemia - Briallen Hopper - April 19, 2020 | University Church in Yale". church.yale.edu.
  20. "Queens College Department of English » Briallen Hopper". CUNY. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
  21. "People – The Department of English".
  22. "July Updates from YPEI". ypei. July 13, 2020.
  23. "Curbed Is Now at Home at 'New York'". Curbed. October 13, 2020.
  24. Smith, Eliza; Swanson, Haley; Brown, Helen Gurley, eds. (October 26, 2022). "Sex and the single woman: 24 writers reimagine Helen Gurley Brown's cult classic". Harper Perennial via Colorado Mountain College.
  25. "Sex and the Single Woman: 24 Writers Reimagine Helen Gurley Brown's Cult Classic w/ Haley Swanson, Briallen Hopper, and Jennifer Chowdhury". Crowdcast.
  26. "Sex and the Single Woman". HarperCollins.
  27. "The Edinburgh Companion to the Essay". Edinburgh University Press Books.
  28. The Edinburgh Companion to the Essay. Edinburgh University Press. October 31, 2022. doi:10.1515/9781474486033/html?lang=en via www.degruyter.com.
  29. "Edinburgh Companions to Literature and the Humanities". edinburghuniversitypress.com.
  30. "Los Angeles Review of Books". Los Angeles Review of Books. July 12, 2015.
  31. "Hard to Love". Bloomsbury.
  32. "Hard to Love: Essays and Confessions". www.publishersweekly.com. July 23, 2018. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
  33. "Best Memoirs of 2019". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  34. "The best international nonfiction of 2019 | CBC Books". CBC. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  35. Stein, Robin; Kim, Caroline (March 25, 2020). "'People Are Dying': 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus". The New York Times.
  36. "NYC's hospitals are in dire straits". City & State NY. March 27, 2020.
  37. Glenza, Jessica; Rao, Ankita; Villarreal, Alexandra (March 27, 2020). "'It's what was happening in Italy': the hospital at the center of New York's Covid-19 crisis". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved March 27, 2020.
  38. "A World Out of Reach". Kirkus Reviews. December 7, 2020.
  39. "Briallen Hopper". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved October 12, 2023.