Benjamin Naka-Hasebe Kingsley is an Indigenous American writer and poet. Benjamin belongs to the Onondaga Nation.[1] He is most recognized for his collections: Colonize Me (Saturnalia, 2019) and Not Your Mama’s Melting Pot (Backwaters Press, 2018).[2] He has also released another collection, Dēmos: An American Multitude (Milkweed Editions, 2021).[3]
Kingsley got his Masters of Fine Arts (MFA) from the University of Pennsylvania.
Colonize Me is Kingsley's second poetry collection.[4] The poems in the collection are often based on his real experiences.[5] The collection won an Eric Hoffer Award.[6]
Dēmos: An American Multitude was released on March 7, 2021. The collection features poems relating to Onondaga, Japanese, Cuban and Appalachian cultures.
From 2019 until at least October 21, 2020, Kingsley worked as an Assistant Professor of English in the College of Arts and Letters at Old Dominion University.[7]
Kingsley grew up in Indiana, Pennsylvania.[8] His parents were both factory workers at a True Temper wheelbarrow factory.
In August 2017, during the time which he was writing Dēmos, Kingsley claims that he was assaulted by a police officer in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[9] According to Kingsley, he was maced by a police officer without reason on the street at night. He then stumbled into oncoming traffic, before going to a local pizza shop, where patrons helped clear his eyes with water.