Curriculum Vitae
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
April 2005 Updrafts
Chaparral from the California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. serving Californiaupdr poets for over 60 yearsaftsVolume 66, No. 3 • April, 2005 President Ted Kooser is Pulitzer Prize Winner James Shuman, PSJ 2005 has been a busy year for Poet Laureate Ted Kooser. On April 7, the Pulitzer commit- First Vice President tee announced that his Delights & Shadows had won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. And, Jeremy Shuman, PSJ later in the week, he accepted appointment to serve a second term as Poet Laureate. Second Vice President While many previous Poets Laureate have also Katharine Wilson, RF Winners of the Pulitzer Prize receive a $10,000 award. Third Vice President been winners of the Pulitzer, not since 1947 has the Pegasus Buchanan, Tw prize been won by the sitting laureate. In that year, A professor of English at the University of Ne- braska-Lincoln, Kooser’s award-winning book, De- Fourth Vice President Robert Lowell won— and at the time the position Eric Donald, Or was known as the Consultant in Poetry to the Li- lights & Shadows, was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2004. Treasurer brary of Congress. It was not until 1986 that the po- Ursula Gibson, Tw sition became known as the Poet Laureate Consult- “I’m thrilled by this,” Kooser said shortly after Recording Secretary ant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. the announcement. “ It’s something every poet dreams Lee Collins, Tw The 89th annual prizes in Journalism, Letters, of. There are so many gifted poets in this country, Corresponding Secretary Drama and Music were announced by Columbia Uni- and so many marvelous collections published each Dorothy Marshall, Tw versity. -
Honorary Degree Recipients 1977 – Present
Board of Trustees HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS 1977 – PRESENT Name Year Awarded Name Year Awarded Claire Collins Harvey, C‘37 Harry Belafonte 1977 Patricia Roberts Harris Katherine Dunham 1990 Toni Morrison 1978 Nelson Mandela Marian Anderson Marguerite Ross Barnett Ruby Dee Mattiwilda Dobbs, C‘46 1979 1991 Constance Baker Motley Miriam Makeba Sarah Sage McAlpin Audrey Forbes Manley, C‘55 Mary French Rockefeller 1980 Jesse Norman 1992 Mabel Murphy Smythe* Louis Rawls 1993 Cardiss Collins Oprah Winfrey Effie O’Neal Ellis, C‘33 Margaret Walker Alexander Dorothy I. Height 1981 Oran W. Eagleson Albert E. Manley Carol Moseley Braun 1994 Mary Brookins Ross, C‘28 Donna Shalala Shirley Chisholm Susan Taylor Eleanor Holmes Norton 1982 Elizabeth Catlett James Robinson Alice Walker* 1995 Maya Angelou Elie Wiesel Etta Moten Barnett Rita Dove Anne Cox Chambers 1983 Myrlie Evers-Williams Grace L. Hewell, C‘40 Damon Keith 1996 Sam Nunn Pinkie Gordon Lane, C‘49 Clara Stanton Jones, C‘34 Levi Watkins, Jr. Coretta Scott King Patricia Roberts Harris 1984 Jeanne Spurlock* Claire Collins Harvey, C’37 1997 Cicely Tyson Bernice Johnson Reagan, C‘70 Mary Hatwood Futrell Margaret Taylor Burroughs Charles Merrill Jewel Plummer Cobb 1985 Romae Turner Powell, C‘47 Ruth Davis, C‘66 Maxine Waters Lani Guinier 1998 Gwendolyn Brooks Alexine Clement Jackson, C‘56 William H. Cosby 1986 Jackie Joyner Kersee Faye Wattleton Louis Stokes Lena Horne Aurelia E. Brazeal, C‘65 Jacob Lawrence Johnnetta Betsch Cole 1987 Leontyne Price Dorothy Cotton Earl Graves Donald M. Stewart 1999 Selma Burke Marcelite Jordan Harris, C‘64 1988 Pearl Primus Lee Lorch Dame Ruth Nita Barrow Jewel Limar Prestage 1989 Camille Hanks Cosby Deborah Prothrow-Stith, C‘75 * Former Student As of November 2019 Board of Trustees HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS 1977 – PRESENT Name Year Awarded Name Year Awarded Max Cleland Herschelle Sullivan Challenor, C’61 Maxine D. -
By Joseph Christopher
RACE, IDENTITY AND PERSPECTIVES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN IN THE SELECTED WORKS OF TONI MORRISON AND RITA DOVE BY JOSEPH CHRISTOPHER MA/ARTS/5043/2010-2011 BEING A RESEARCH SUBMITTED TO THE POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL, AHMADU BELLO UNIVERSITY, ZARIA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF MASTER OF ARTS (M.A) IN ENGLISH LITERATURE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH AND LITERARY STUDIES, FACULTY OF ARTS AHMADU BELLO UNIVERSITY, ZARIA 2014 i DECLARATION I hereby declare that the work in the thesis titled “Race, Identity and Perspectives of African American Women in the Selected Works of Toni Morrison and Rita Dove” has been written by me in the Department of English and Literary Studies under the supervision of Dr. Edward Abah Ochigbo and Dr. Suleiman Jaji. The information derived from the literature has been duly acknowledged in the text and a list of references provided. No part of this thesis was previously presented for another degree or diploma at any university. …………………………… …………………………. …………………………. Name of student Signature Date ii CERTIFICATION This thesis entitled “Race Identity and Perspectives of African American Women in the Selected Works of Toni Morrison and Rita Dove” by Joseph Christopher meets the regulations governing the award of Masters of Arts Degree in Literature of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, is approved for its contribution to knowledge and Literary Presentation. ………………………………………………………… ………………… Chairman, Supervisory Committee Date ……………………………………………………….. ……………………. Member, Supervisory Committee Date ……………………………………………………… ………………….. Head of Department Date ……………………………………………………... …………………… Dean, Postgraduate School Date iii DEDICATION This work is deservedly dedicated to the memory of my father, Late Mr. Amobi C. Christopher (Igwe), the one who kick-started this dream. -
ALSCW 17Th Annual Conference
ALSCW 17th Annual Conference Friday, October 14, 2011 – Sunday, October 16, 2011 with special thanks to the Boston University Center for the Humanities (Professor James Winn, Director) We warmly invite non-members of the ALSCW to register for this conference and enjoy our stimulating menu of events and the convivialities of the weekend. If you would like to join our Association and enjoy all the privileges of membership—including a member-rate for conference registration—please visit our website ALSCW.org We look forward to seeing our members again and to welcoming new members. Thursday October 13 Prologue to the Conference 7:00pm: A Novelist and a Poet: Tim Parks and Mark Halliday Reading The Poetry Reading Series at Boston University Presents TIM PARKS and MARK HALLIDAY Thursday October 13th at 7 p.m. The Castle, 225 Bay State Road Supported by the BU Center for the Humanities, College of General Studies, and the Association of Literary Scholars, Critics, and Writers Free and open to the public Please contact Meg Tyler ([email protected], 617-358-4199) with any questions Mark Halliday teaches at Ohio University. His books of poems are: Little Star (William Morrow, 1987), Tasker Street (University of Massachusetts, 1992), Selfwolf (University of Chicago, 1999), Jab (University of Chicago, 2002), and Keep This Forever (Tupelo Press, 2008). His critical study Stevens and the Interpersonal appeared in 1991 from Princeton University Press. He co-authored with Allen Grossman a book on poetics, The Sighted Singer (John Hopkins University Press, 1991). Tim Parks was born in Manchester in 1954, and studied at Cambridge and Harvard before moving permanently to Italy in 1981. -
The Poetry of Rita Dove
University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Doctoral Dissertations Student Scholarship Winter 1999 Language's "bliss of unfolding" in and through history, autobiography and myth: The poetry of Rita Dove Carol Keyes University of New Hampshire, Durham Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation Recommended Citation Keyes, Carol, "Language's "bliss of unfolding" in and through history, autobiography and myth: The poetry of Rita Dove" (1999). Doctoral Dissertations. 2107. https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/2107 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMi films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. -
My Children, Teaching, and Nimrod the Word
XIV Passions: My Children, Teaching, and Nimrod The word passion has most often been associated with strong sexual desire or lust. I have felt a good deal of that kind of passion in my life but I prefer not to speak of it at this moment. Instead, it is the appetite for life in a broader sense that seems to have driven most of my actions. Moreover, the former craving is focused on an individual (unless the sexual drive is indiscriminant) and depends upon that individual for a response in order to intensify or even maintain. Fixating on my first husband—sticking to him no matter what his response, not being able to say goodbye to him —almost killed me. I had to shift the focus of my sexual passion to another and another and another in order to receive the spark that would rekindle and sustain me. That could have been dangerous; I was lucky. But with the urge to create, the intense passion to “make something,” there was always another outlet, another fulfillment just within reach. My children, teaching, and Nimrod, the journal I edited for so many years, eased my hunger, provided a way to participate and delight in something always changing and growing. from The passion to give birth to and grow with my children has, I believe, been expressed in previous chapters. I loved every aspect of having children conception, to the four births, three of which I watched in a carefully placed mirror at the foot of the hospital delivery room bed: May 6, 1957, birth of Leslie Ringold; November 8, 1959, birth of John Ringold; August 2, 1961: birth of Jim Ringold; July 27, 1964: birth of Suzanne Ringold (Harman). -
Librarian of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate
University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Media Relations UNH Publications and Documents 8-2-2007 Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate Erika Mantz UNH Media Relations Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/news Recommended Citation Mantz, Erika, "Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate" (2007). UNH Today. 850. https://scholars.unh.edu/news/850 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the UNH Publications and Documents at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Media Relations by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate 9/11/17, 1250 PM Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate Contact: Erika Mantz 603-862-1567 UNH Media Relations August 2, 2007 Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has announced the appointment of Charles Simic to be the Library’s 15th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry. Simic will take up his duties in the fall, opening the Library’s annual literary series on Oct. 17 with a reading of his work. He also will be a featured speaker at the Library of Congress National Book Festival in the Poetry pavilion on Saturday, Sept. 29, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Simic succeeds Donald Hall as Poet Laureate and joins a long line of distinguished poets who have served in the position, including most recently Ted Kooser, Louise Glück, Billy Collins, Stanley Kunitz, Robert Pinsky, Robert Hass and Rita Dove. -
Howard Nemerov's War Poetry
Diederik Oostdijk Debunking ‘The Good War’ Myth: Howard Nemerov’s War Poetry This essay offers the most comprehensive analysis to date of Howard Nemerov’s war poetry. Nemerov (1920–1991) was a fighter pilot of the Royal Air Force and the U.S. Air Force during World War II and became one the most prolific American poets of that war. Whereas his early poems about World War II tend to be impersonal and dense, his later war poems, especially those in War Stories (1987) are more autobiographical and lyri- cal. Throughout his career Nemerov resisted the idea that World War II had been a ‘Good War’ and all of his poems are testimony to his traumatic experiences as a fighter pilot. “Poetry is a way of getting something right in language” Howard Nemerov, “On the Measure of Poetry” Of all the American poets who were involved in and emerged after World War II, Howard Nemerov (1920–1991) tried to debunk ‘The Good War’ myth most consistently and assertively.1 Nemerov published over twenty-five volumes of poetry, won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, was poetry con- sultant at the Library of Congress, and was awarded the National Medal of the Arts in 1987, the highest distinction the American government can bestow on its artists. Despite all the prizes and awards given to him during his lifetime, Nemerov was quickly forgotten by literary historians after his death, partly because of his reputation as an opaque and intellectual poet and partly because his life was less controversial than that of some of his contemporaries, for instance James Dickey and Robert Lowell. -
September 2003 Updrafts
Chaparral from the California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. serving Californiaupdr poets for over 60 yearsaftsVolume 64, No. 5 • September, 2003 President James Shuman, PSJ Louise Glück appointed new Poet Laureate First Vice President Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has announced the appointment of Louise Jeremy Shuman, PSJ Glück as the country’s12th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry. She will take up her duties Second Vice President in the fall, opening the Library’s annual literary series on October 21 with a reading of her Katharine Wilson, RF work. Glück succeeds Robert Penn Warren, Richard Wilbur, Howard Nemerov, Mark Strand, Third Vice President Pegasus Buchanan, Tw Joseph Brodsky, Mona Van Duyn, Rita Dove, Robert Hass, Robert Pinsky, Stanley Kunitz Fourth Vice President and Billy Collins. Eric Donald, Or The literary series will continue on October 22 Treasurer with a Favorite Poem reading featuring Frank Bidart Meadowlands (1996); The Wild Iris (1992), which re- Ursula Gibson, Tw and former Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky. In addition ceived the Pulitzer Prize and the Poetry Society of Recording Secretary to programming the new reading series, Glück will America’s William Carlos Williams Award; Ararat Lee Collins, Tw participate in events in February and again in May at (1990), which received the Library of Congress’s Corresponding Secretary the Library of Congress. On making the appointment, Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry; Dorothy Marshall, Tw the Librarian said, “Louise Glück will bring to the and The Triumph of Achilles (1985), which received Members-at-Large Chair Library of Congress a strong, vivid, deep poetic the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Boston Frances Yordan, FG voice, accomplished in a series of book-length po- Globe Literary Press Award, and the Poetry Society etic cycles. -
The War in the Air: Post-War Memory in the Poetry of Howard Nemerov and Richard Hugo Michael Sarnowski
The War in the Air: Post-War Memory in the Poetry of Howard Nemerov and Richard Hugo Michael Sarnowski He watched the sky and thought of all the fires the world had ever seen, fires from wars, fires from bombs. So much smoke. Where has it all gone? New smoke curled beneath wisps of old, drifting ever higher, higher. Where does it all go? He inhaled deeply and his insides burned, and Vernon knew all that smoke was now just the air we breathe. —Alan Heathcock, “Smoke,” Volt: Stories he title “The War in the Air” comes from Howard Nemerov's 1977 poem of the same name, and this paper focuses on the pervasiveness of war memory in the poetry of T two members of the U.S. Army Air Forces who served in World War II, Howard Nemerov and Richard Hugo. Neither Nemerov nor Hugo began publishing poetry until after the conclusion of their armed service, and the war did not feature as a prominent topic until later in their writing careers. For Hugo, 24 years had passed since the war before his 1969 collection Good Luck In Cracked Italian was published, poems in which Hugo negotiates his memories of the war with a return visit to the sites of the Mediterranean theater where he flew combat missions for the 825th Squadron. Though Nemerov had written poems on subjects such as service, suffering, and the universality of war in each of his poetry collections, it wasn’t until 1987’s War Stories that a collection of his was thematically driven by both war experience and contemplation of the impulses that return humans to war. -
Longfellow House's Brazilian Connection
on fellow ous L g ulletinH e Volume 4 No. 2 A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service December 2000 The Emperor and the Poet: LongfellowB House’s Brazilian Connection t Brazil’s Independence Day celebra- Ambassador Costa went on to cite Dom Using Longfellow’s published letters Ation on September 7, 2000, Ambas- Pedro II‘s long correspondence with and the House archives, Jim Shea sador Mauricio Eduardo Cortes Costa, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow confirmed that on June 10, 1876 Consul General of Brazil in Boston, and his visit to the poet’s Dom Pedro II dined with bestowed upon Boston’s Mayor Thomas house in 1876. Henry W. Longfellow and Menino the “Medal Order of the South- This story has recently friends at what was then ern Cross, Rank of Commander.” The been pieced together known as Craigie House. medal was created by Brazil’s first emperor, through a collaboration In his journal Longfel- Dom Pedro I, in 1822, as he wrote, to “ac- between members of the low wrote: “Dom Pedro knowledge the relevant services rendered to National Park Service II, Emperor of Brazil, the empire by my most loyal subjects, civil and the Brazilian Con- dined with us. The servants, and foreign dignitaries, and as a sulate. In August Mar- other guests were Ralph token of my highest esteem.” cilio Farias, Cultural Waldo Emerson, Oliver In his address at the ceremony at Boston Affairs Advisor at the Wendell Holmes, Louis City Hall, the Ambassador spoke of the Brazilian Consulate in Agassiz, and Thomas Gold ties between Brazil and the U.S., particu- Boston, called Site Manager Appleton. -
School of Unlikeness: the Creative Writing Workshop and American Poetry
School of Unlikeness: The Creative Writing Workshop and American Poetry Sarah Cohen A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2012 Reading Committee: Brian Reed, Chair Jeanne Heuving Jessica Burstein Program Authorized to Offer Degree: English University of Washington Abstract School of Unlikeness: American Poetry and the Creative Writing Workshop Sarah Cohen Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Associate Professor Brian Reed English This dissertation is a study of the creative writing workshop as a shaping institution of American poetry in the twentieth century. It takes as its starting point the observation that in the postwar period the rise of academic creative writing programs introduced profound material changes into the lives of American poets, as poetry became professionalized within the larger institution of the university. It goes on to argue that poets responded to these changes in ways that are directly legible in their work, producing a variety of poetic interrogations of the cultural and psychological effects of the reflexive professional self-fashioning that became, partially through the workshop, the condition of modern literary life. In other words, as poets became students and teachers, their classroom and career experiences occasioned new kinds of explorations of identity, performance, vocation, authority, and the cultural status of poets and poetry. The cluster of concerns linked to the evolving institution of "creative writing" shows stylistically diverse works to be united, and also resonates with and helps to clarify the major debates within the poetry world over the past decades between the camps of the "mainstream" and the "avant- garde" or, as Robert Lowell put it in 1959, "the cooked and the raw." My dissertation examines a variety of iterations of the relationship between workshop culture and poetic production through case studies of the poets Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Theodore Roethke, Richard Hugo, and Jorie Graham.