Hi! I’m Saturn, and I’m so honored and excited to be an editorial intern! A little about me: I’m a Chinese-Vietnamese immigrant to the U.S., a Taurus and ENFJ, and I currently study in Connecticut as a prospective Comparative Literature and ??? (TBD) major. In my free time, I like to create graphics and websites as a means of self-expression, boil maple syrup, drink iced coffee, DJ techno music, visit art galleries/museums/aquariums, and consume an absurd amount of content—books, films, video essays, old albums only discoverable on YouTube, UI/UX tutorials, personal blogs, you name it. This sense of media also pervades my interests and my mind when I write: much of what I produce has been ekphrasis, and I see it as a form that elevates writing to new levels. I also write a lot about bodies of water, love, and grief, and it can be seen through my chapbook BLOODPATHS (Kith Books, 2023), and my work-in-progress project EMPRESS OF LONGING (book about my situationships that have destroyed me).
The world does not end when you’re seventeen. I knew this when I began writing, yet, at the same time, it does not feel that way for me. When I began writing a few years ago, I had no idea where this practice would take me, and it’s brought me so much wonderful people and things into my life, and I can’t imagine where I’d be otherwise.
I’m currently a senior in high school (hello youngest Sundress intern title!), and entering college next year. Life, for me, has barely begun, yet I also feel that I have experienced enough for a lifetime. Since my sophomore year, I’ve always been the youngest person at poetry commitments, online internships, activism spaces, and more. It’s challenged me in the way that I’ve had to work twice as hard to gain the respect of my peers, yet the feeling of my voice being heard has become much, much more valuable.
I began writing at a time of self-crisis and discovery, yet I’ve been reading for years before. Growing up in southern China, I found myself learning about the world through novels and websites, and when I moved to America, the language barriers fueled my urge to understand my surroundings even further.
It makes sense, then, why I take so much inspiration from other teen-into-adult poets, and especially writers who are also queer and Asian, such as Kaylee Jeong, Stephanie Chang (both of which were undress interns and helped me find this opportunity), K-Ming Chang, Jennie Xie, Alexander Chee and others. I also find inspiration from pieces of art which honestly document human experiences—Tracy Emin’s My Bed, Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s Portrait of Ross in L.A., On Kawara’s Today series, for example—and art galleries highlighting marginalized voices and communities from around the world. When I began writing, I’d hoped to channel something similar: by using my experiences as queer, immigrant, FGLI, and more, I wanted to speak to others and let them know their experiences and identities do not make them alone.
My offer at Sundress meant that I could work on becoming the platform to elevate these same artists I admired for most of my life, and be a part of the community which made their voices matter. Whether it be through helping put together PR for manuscripts or writing reviews and interviews highlighting smaller authors, I hope to work and uncover more such voices of intersectionality at Sundress, and bring them to more budding writers like myself.
Saturn Browne (she/they) is a Chinese-Vietnamese immigrant and the Connecticut Youth Poet Laureate, East Coast Asian American Student Union (ECAASU) Artist-in-Residence, and the author of BLOODPATHS. Her work has been recognized by Gone Lawn, GASHER, Beaver Mag, the Pulitzer Center, Foyle Young Poets, and others. She is an incoming undergraduate student at Yale University.