By Elline Lipkin

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
We’d love to hear your thoughts on the importance of the arts and humanities and how this project resonates with you.
I love the idea of writing about writing — tracing where creativity first sparked and where the lit fuse led. This piece (submitted) first was published online with Silver Birch Press.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
I believe I was two or three years old in this photo, at that time living in New Jersey, before my family relocated to Miami, where I grew up. My brother and I were fascinated by my father’s old manual typewriter — it seemed magical the way words came out of the top. I think we were also just at that age of realizing the power words hold. Recently, I bought an old manual typewriter at an auction. Something about the lack of the intermediary of technology makes striking out words more satisfying and immediate.

Tell us something about the natural world that you love and don’t wish to lose. What are your thoughts on the kind of world we are leaving for the next generation?
I don't wish to lose the seasons. Growing up in Miami we 'joked' that there were two seasons — 'hot' and 'hotter.' Now it seems to be hot all of the time. Now that I live in California and have been through an 'urban wildfire' I worry immensely for the wildlife and ourselves in the face of climate change.

Photo credit: David Lipkin

Elline Lipkin is currently a Research Scholar with UCLA’s Center for the Study of Women. She also teaches poetry workshops. She is the author of The Errant Thread, selected by Eavan Boland for the Kore Press First Book Award, Girls’ Studies, published by Seal Press, and Girl in a Forest, forthcoming from Trio House Press in 2025.