Hearing Claudia Rankine talk was a lot more inspirational than I thought it would be – not that the topic of her novel is not inspirational, but I ended up learning a lot about Rankine herself and general life lessons that could really apply to anyone in any field, especially through the host’s anecdote about Rankine and the Q&A that followed Rankine’s reading of her novel. The host started off with an anecdote of how she met Rankine. At the time, the host was a small, aspiring poet. When she met Rankine, the host talked about how nervous she was about an upcoming speech she had to give the next day. Rankine immediately took her to her home and sat the host down and made her present in front of her and her husband, almost against the host’s will. I thought it spoke a lot to Rankine’s character – she truly finds the good in people who see the good in her, and will help anyone succeed in whatever way she can.
The reading Rankine presented has already been described in others’ posts, so I’ll be focusing on what Rankine said during the Q&A, which is what stood out to me the most, anyways. One person asked her how Rankine holds her ground as a black woman in a predominantly very white field, and how she reacts when her work is compared to these white standards. Rankine followed with an anecdote of how one publisher called her a few months ago asking for new poems to publish. When Rankine sent them, the publisher called her and said that the poems were awful. A few months later, however, she received a call back from the same person who said that he had found the poems again and absolutely loved them and did not know why he had hated them initially. The moral of her story was that your work is usually judged on the spot by critics. These judgements should not be taken personally, and you should hold your ground when it comes to criticism because if you give up in the face of harsh criticism, you will never find success in such a tough community.
Another answer that I found interesting was the way she wrote her discussed novel. Rankine described these novels as “conversations” between herself and the people who provided her with the anecdotes. She was able to take anecdotes from her peers and reconstruct them so that the text came across as a story that a friend would tell you in a coffeeshop. I thought this was an interesting way to look at it, considering that Citizen was also formatted in this way. Ever since she mentioned it, I went back to the book to reread some passages, and I now read her text more as a conversation between myself and Rankine, as if Rankine is telling me all these experiences that happened to her and her friends.
Rankine is truly an incredibly intelligent, graceful and super cool woman.

