Author
Listed:
- Hugo Kamya
(School for Social Work, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063, USA)
- Becky Thompson
(College of Social Sciences, Policy and Practice, Simmons University, Boston, MA 02115, USA)
Abstract
The article explores letter writing as both an artistic practice and a relational method of inquiry. Through an exchange of letters between two academics, the authors reflect on how their correspondence deepened their relationship and created space for honest, vulnerable communication. Their exchange began while collaborating on a program addressing racism, where they discovered that sharing personal stories could serve as a foundation for building authentic relationships across difference. By speaking openly about fears and truths typically hidden in academic spaces, their writing resisted the isolation of the academy and transformed silence into collective expression and action. The article includes the letters and poetry that emerged from this exchange, presenting storytelling as a liberatory and decolonizing practice grounded in feminist and decolonial traditions. The authors show how writing can simultaneously function as theory, resistance, and renewal. They ask where creative scholarly passions originate, how social location shapes the pursuit of justice, and what nurtures emerging ideas. Through critical reflection on their vulnerabilities and the process of building trust, they position letter writing as both creative expression and method. Meaning is generated through the act of writing itself, which becomes an invitation to activism and courageous storytelling. Ultimately, they argue that letter writing is an art form and a way of knowing that sustains continuous learning, deepens connection, and inspires action.
Suggested Citation
Hugo Kamya & Becky Thompson, 2026.
"Epistolary as Art Form: A Methodology for Truth Telling,"
Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 15(2), pages 1-24, February.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jscscx:v:15:y:2026:i:2:p:139-:d:1868095
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