Friday, November 18, 2016

Macro Writers Workshop Nov. 29!

Macro Arts Journal presents its first ever Writers Workshop! Bring any work-in-progress, whether that's a poem, a story, some lyrics, CNF, or even a term paper, and share it with like-minded writers and artists from around the school. We'll share feedback in a welcoming, positive environment.

Let's connect!

When: Tuesday, Nov. 29 from 7–9 p.m.
Where: VKC 254

Please send us an email at uscmacro@googlegroups.com if you have any questions or suggestions!

Friday, May 6, 2016

마이크

우리 우연히 만났다
근데 너를 그때는 안사랑했다
가끔씩 이야기 했다
근데 너를 그냥 조금씩 더 좋아했다
조금씩 더 보고 싶다
근데 왜?나를 다치면 다칠수록 더 반했다
늦게 대답할때
잊어버렸다
안 대답할때
잊어버리고 싶었다
잊어버리고있다
잊어버릴 수 없다
기억한다
지금 문자 절데 보낼수없다
매일 매일 니가 나 안사랑하는 것 같아도
왜 내가 왜 계속 바보처럼
대답 기다릴까.



Danielle Robertson is a rising junior studying East Asian Languages and Cultures.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Call for Submissions

Calling all artists, writers, musicians, poets, and student voices! Macro invites submissions to an all-new arts journal dedicated to USC’s international community. Macro asks, when American English is the normative language of the university, what are the thoughts that go unrecorded?

A student-run arts journal that showcases the untranslatable perspectives of international students at USC, Macro invites submissions in all languages. Students are encouraged to submit original artwork in any medium that engages the international nature of USC’s community, regardless of the creator’s country of birth or citizenship. Accepted submissions will be published online and in a forthcoming print edition.

For more information, see a few sample pieces by our editors below (please outdo us!) and our submission guidelines. We greatly look forward to seeing your work.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

D.I.D.

“Pssst…hey,
your Mexican’s showing.”
It sounded like food in Her teeth,
or a stray hair.

She swiftly apologizes
And brings the Japanese back,
So no one can say She “slipped through the cracks”
Or even mention the words
“affirmative action”.

The Hawaiian?
She comes out proudly!
Hawaiian is exotic. Hawaiian’s sexy.
Mexican brings thoughts of politics, fences, and futile solutions
She doesn’t want to hear anymore.

Oh don’t get me wrong, She can come out sometimes;
When they need Her to translate a billboard,
Or they need a “more diverse sample”,
Then She comes out.

Otherwise, She retreats,
Goes to sleep,
Lays dormant until She can go home

To those who understand Her,
Those who are like Her.

Dancing on the boarder line,
Dissociative identity,
Call it what you want.
What do I call it?


Survival.


Elisa Shimada is a painter and poet raised in LA County. Her mother is full Native Hawaiian, and her father is half Japanese, half Mexican. She is an undergrad at USC studying Sociology and Social Science with an emphasis in Psychology. One of her passions is outreach for Latino Students with Latino Student Fellowship, or LaFe. Elisa is a Macro editor.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Pidgin

I miss the saliva curry
we stir with mingling tongues,

the way she closes her eyes and offers
a sommelier’s pause before she
adjudicates the pidgin flavor.


Max Kapur is Seattle: a quarter Indian and in love with coffee. He is currently an undergrad at USC studying jazz piano and Korean. His work lives at illusionslopes.blogspot.com and is forthcoming in Westwind, UCLA's undergraduate journal of the arts. Max is a Macro editor.