By Jonah Grinkewitz
When Gabriela Igloria started at ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ, she didnāt have the typical freshman experience of being lost on campus.
Instead, she gave directions.
āIt is a little like a second home in some ways because I knew where everything was as soon as I got here,ā she said.
Thatās because as the daughter of Luisa A. Igloria, Louis I. Jaffe Professor of Creative Writing and English at ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ, she would often tag along to her momās classes in the Batten Arts and Letters Building as a child.
Her mother, who is poet laureate emerita for Virginia, instilled in her a love for language at an early age.
āWe would do this thing every night where we would just flip to a random page in the dictionary and then I would learn a new word and we would put it on this big wall in our hallway,ā Igloria said.
This December, she will graduate with two bachelorās degrees in English and womenās and gender studies and a minor in queer studies. She is also a member of ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ's honors college and received the .Ģż
Like her mother, she is already an accomplished and talented poet.
During her sophomore year, she won the undergraduate prize in poetry from the for her poem In 2017, her poem was published in the Rattle Young Poets Anthology.
Cathleen Rhodes, master lecturer in ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļās Department of Womenās and Gender Studies, said she has known Igloria since she was young and watched her grow up near and around the campus. āShe is her own person, but Gabby shares her motherās generosity of spirit, sharp intellect and creative talents.ā
āIt is a little like a second home in some ways because I knew where everything was as soon as I got here."
More than just a poet, Igloria also enjoys writing nonfiction and creating zines ā hand-made, self-published works that incorporate original or appropriated texts and are designed to be easily circulated.
She said she likes to explore many topics in her work, from her Filipino heritage to environmental issues to local history. While taking one of Rhodesā queer studies classes, she discovered that her familyās church had queer history associated with it.
āI like doing the sort of nerdy, archival research type of thing and making it something more personal,ā she said.
She also likes to write about things that āhauntā people. Her āDreamscape ā¦ā poem was a pantoum ā a 15th-century Malaysian verse form with repeating lines ā that helped her process the loss of two childhood friends.
āThatās really interesting to me, as well as how people themselves are not just the haunted but the haunting of their ancestors because of the way we dwell on things,ā she said.
āShe has an inquisitive approach to learning that helps her make striking connections between various subjects, and she invites others to share in conversations that, in addition to sometimes providing answers, raises other important questions,ā Rhodes said.
Outside of writing, Igloria served as cultural liaison and then president of . In these roles, she tried to keep the history behind Filipino events and traditions front and center.
āThere are a lot of things about Filipino culture that are maybe more well known, but also more commodified,ā she said. āSo I wanted people to be more aware of what theyāre consuming.ā
After graduation, Igloria plans to take a break before considering work or graduate school.
āI cannot begin to predict Gabbyās future,ā said Rhodes. āI think anything I could imagine would be too limiting given her vision and talents, so I look forward to waiting and finding out what her future holds.ā