State of Wonder

Portland Writer Melanie Alldritt Doesn’t Want to Be Beautiful: She Wants To Speak

By Aaron Scott (OPB)
July 19, 2016 2:45 a.m.
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Portland writer Melanie Alldritt works through her experiences as a black women, as well as the recent shootings, by writing about it.

Portland writer Melanie Alldritt works through her experiences as a black women, as well as the recent shootings, by writing about it.

Courtesy of Melanie Alldritt

In a world where we think we’ve seen everything, the videos of the shootings of Alton Sterling and, especially, Philando Castile were shocking because of the intimacy they offered. Anyone who watched Diamond Reynolds calmly addressing the police officer who shot her boyfriend, Castile, as he lay dying beside her, will never forget it.

Across the country, people took to the streets and to the internet. People mourned and raged on social media. And a number of prominent local writers shared an essay by a young writer that caught our eye: "I Don't Want to Be Beautiful" by Melanie Alldritt in "Nailed Magazine."

As part of an episode looking at how Portland artists are responding to the recent shooting and dealing with race through their art, State of Wonder invited Alldritt in to read the essay and discuss how writing lets her work through experiences that are too horrible to talk about.

Alldritt is currently working on an essay about the grief of being a black woman that she'll read at the Grief Rites reading series on August 8 at the American Legion Post 143.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:
THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:
THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR: