Articles

  • 2 months ago | lithub.com | Fariha Roisin

    When Aisha Gawad first Googled Elisa Albert, she immediately noticed the author’s public Instagram page. Gawad was researching who the moderator would be for her upcoming panel at the Albany Book Festival, a natural curiosity for any writer ahead of a group event. What Gawad wasn’t expecting was to find dozens of Instagram posts and stories mocking anyone who expressed grief over the loss of Palestinian lives. Then there was the sheer level of vitriol in Albert’s professional writing.

  • Apr 12, 2024 | embedded.substack.com | Nick Catucci |Emilia Petrarca |Fariha Roisin

    Embedded is your essential guide to what’s good on the internet, written by Kate Lindsay and edited by Nick Catucci. Most weeks, we quiz a “very online” person for their essential guide to what’s good on the internet. Today we welcome Sydney Gore, a senior digital design editor at Architectural Digest, where she writes the Rent Free column, trend reports, and stories about big bows and jouches.

  • Mar 28, 2024 | thecreativeindependent.com | Fariha Roisin

    Fariha Róisín writer, multidisciplinary artist Fariha Róisín is a multidisciplinary artist, born in Ontario, Canada. She was raised in Sydney, Australia, and is based in Los Angeles. As a Muslim queer Bangladeshi, she is interested in the margins, in liminality, otherness and the mercurial nature of being.

  • Feb 9, 2024 | fariharoisin.substack.com | Fariha Roisin

    It is I, Fariha, the resident grief doula. In the past few years, I’ve come to understand myself as a keeper of pain, a vault of memories past and present, the person in her family who releases the stored trauma, and therefore is tasked to face them — like no one else in my family has or can, before. I think this is perfectly encapsulated in my writing, all the aches of my existence have been channeled into my words, and I believe it’s one gift that has been imparted onto me from something beyond.

  • Nov 13, 2023 | drudge-report.net | Fariha Roisin

    Apocalyptic moments come and go. This lush and unexpected enclave is a reminder that the Earth will always be here, even after we’re gone.