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The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

Head coach Trisha Ford talks to her players after Texas A&Ms win against Mizzou at Davis Diamond on Sunday, April 30, 2023.
Lights, camera, action
April 25, 2024
Texas A&M DH Hayden Schott (5) celebrating a home run during Texas A&M’s game against The University of Houston on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 at Olsen Field. (Hannah Harrison/The Battalion)
Over the outfield wall
April 25, 2024
Junior G Wade Taylor IV (4) covers his face after a missed point during Texas A&Ms game against Arkansas on Feb. 20, 2024 at Reed Arena. (Jaime Rowe/The Battalion)
When it rains, it pours
February 24, 2024
Ali Camarillo (2) waiting to see if he got the out during Texas A&Ms game against UIW on Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2024 at Olsen Field. (Hannah Harrison/The Battalion)
Four for four
February 20, 2024
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Photo Courtesy of Maddie Pearson
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Head coach Trisha Ford talks to her players after Texas A&Ms win against Mizzou at Davis Diamond on Sunday, April 30, 2023.
Lights, camera, action
Hunter Mitchell, Associate Sports Editor • April 25, 2024

Thirty-two wins in 2021, eight in conference play. Thirty-one wins in 2022, six in conference play. Thirty-five wins in 2023, 12 in conference...

Texas A&M DH Hayden Schott (5) celebrating a home run during Texas A&M’s game against The University of Houston on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 at Olsen Field. (Hannah Harrison/The Battalion)
Over the outfield wall
April 25, 2024
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Kennedy White, 19, sits for a portrait in the sweats she wore the night of her alleged assault inside the Y.M.C.A building that holds Texas A&M’s Title IX offices in College Station, Texas on Feb. 16, 2024 (Ishika Samant/The Battalion).
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Nicholas Gutteridge April 25, 2024

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Scenes from '74
April 25, 2024
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Art critic Theresa Lozano says Taylor Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department” isn’t as bad as other critics say it is. (Photo courtesy of Republic Records)
Criticism: ‘The Tortured Poets Department’
Theresa Lozano, Life & Arts Writer • April 25, 2024

Rating: 8.8/10 From an anticipated release to a surprise double album at 2 a.m., Taylor Swift put it all out there with her recently released...

US Poet Laureate gives reading on campus, talks racial history

On the heels of her Monday Q&A session, Natasha Tretheway, Pulitzer Prize winner and U.S. Poet Laureate, hosted a packed room of students, staff and colleagues Tuesday to discuss her past and read from her most recent collections of poems, “Thrall.”
“‘Thrall’ is the most difficult book I’ve ever had to write, and I realize at this point in my life, the most difficult book I’ll have to live with,” Trethewey said. “The book, when I wrote it, was in my mind a very intimate conversation that I was having with my poet father in a very public way. The book is dedicated to my father. In it I’m concerned with deeply engrained and unexamined notions of racial difference between time and space.”
Trethewey’s father, who died six weeks ago, was also a poet and encouraged her in her career. She said they would often give readings together and would stand at the podium and recite poems about her mother and her childhood.
Raised by a white father and black mother in Mississippi, Trethewey writes about the racial issues that have accompanied her since birth, such as when the state rendered her an illegitimate child because her interracial parents’ marriage was illegal.
Being from Mississippi, Trethewey said her relationship with the South was love-hate, as it was the site of racial oppression but will always be her home.
“I couldn’t imagine being a writer without having the horrors of Mississippi with me to spur me on and to make her a better place,” Trethewey said. “I often mention that those of us who love and hate our homelands are often the greatest patriots, because we are the ones who want to make our homelands better.”
Miscegenation is a common theme throughout many of Trethewey’s poems about her childhood, as she writes about such things as times when she and her father discussed Thomas Jefferson’s affair with his slave, Sally Hemings. She describes in her poem “Enlightenment” that she and her father would go to Monticello, Jefferson’s hilltop home, to discuss race and debate “the distance between word and deed,” referring to Jefferson’s dislike for but dependence on slavery.
Trethewey said she often felt “parsed” along racial lines as a child.
“It was through language in a lot of ways that we saw it — the language of the law as well as custom — and this is one of the reasons that I became fascinated with the way we use language to divide human beings,” Trethewey said.

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