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I do not have a daughter / therefore I have kept her safe.
The true prevalence of child abuse is unquantifiable due to the shadows in which it occurs; vicious acts are committed every day yet never reported. Young victims carry lifelong psychological trauma, impacting their daily lives and putting them at risk for a number of further issues—developmental delays, limited opportunities, and additional victimization, among others. These problems compound the social norms already engendering violence against children, contributing to a world in which even more youth are raised in perilous environments.
In Some Animals Eat Their Young, Dmitra Gideon merges public and private histories to address the impossible-to-voice cruelties of child abuse. They blend documented crimes with personal tragedies, incorporating the familial violence of Greek mythology and the formality of legal policies and statistics, ultimately bearing witness to brutality, conveying communal culpability, and dispelling the myth of evil. In poems, essays, and hybrid pieces, Giedon searches for patterns, deciding, "it seems a web; comes from everywhere, converges, spreads. Not cycle but saturation."
For every copy sold, Another New Calligraphy will donate $1 to Hutton House, an emergency shelter and drop-in center for teenagers who run away, are in crisis, or are experiencing homelessness.
Read an excerpt published in Impossible Task.
76 pages, handmade and numbered • 2024
I do not have a daughter / therefore I have kept her safe.
The true prevalence of child abuse is unquantifiable due to the shadows in which it occurs; vicious acts are committed every day yet never reported. Young victims carry lifelong psychological trauma, impacting their daily lives and putting them at risk for a number of further issues—developmental delays, limited opportunities, and additional victimization, among others. These problems compound the social norms already engendering violence against children, contributing to a world in which even more youth are raised in perilous environments.
In Some Animals Eat Their Young, Dmitra Gideon merges public and private histories to address the impossible-to-voice cruelties of child abuse. They blend documented crimes with personal tragedies, incorporating the familial violence of Greek mythology and the formality of legal policies and statistics, ultimately bearing witness to brutality, conveying communal culpability, and dispelling the myth of evil. In poems, essays, and hybrid pieces, Giedon searches for patterns, deciding, "it seems a web; comes from everywhere, converges, spreads. Not cycle but saturation."
For every copy sold, Another New Calligraphy will donate $1 to Hutton House, an emergency shelter and drop-in center for teenagers who run away, are in crisis, or are experiencing homelessness.
Read an excerpt published in Impossible Task.
76 pages, handmade and numbered • 2024
I do not have a daughter / therefore I have kept her safe.
The true prevalence of child abuse is unquantifiable due to the shadows in which it occurs; vicious acts are committed every day yet never reported. Young victims carry lifelong psychological trauma, impacting their daily lives and putting them at risk for a number of further issues—developmental delays, limited opportunities, and additional victimization, among others. These problems compound the social norms already engendering violence against children, contributing to a world in which even more youth are raised in perilous environments.
In Some Animals Eat Their Young, Dmitra Gideon merges public and private histories to address the impossible-to-voice cruelties of child abuse. They blend documented crimes with personal tragedies, incorporating the familial violence of Greek mythology and the formality of legal policies and statistics, ultimately bearing witness to brutality, conveying communal culpability, and dispelling the myth of evil. In poems, essays, and hybrid pieces, Giedon searches for patterns, deciding, "it seems a web; comes from everywhere, converges, spreads. Not cycle but saturation."
For every copy sold, Another New Calligraphy will donate $1 to Hutton House, an emergency shelter and drop-in center for teenagers who run away, are in crisis, or are experiencing homelessness.
Read an excerpt published in Impossible Task.
76 pages, handmade and numbered • 2024

Dmitra Gideon (they/she/he) is a writer, educator, and community organizer originally from unceded Miwok and Yokuts territories in California and currently living in so-called Pittsburgh, PA. They serve as Director of Youth-Centered Programming and Community Collaboration for Write Pittsburgh, and they are a founding member of Pittsburgh Family Liberation, an abolitionist collective focused on mutual aid, advocacy, and community care for children and caregivers targeted by the family policing system. They really, really love trees.