From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nationality words link to articles with information on the
nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
- March 16: Authorities in Saudi Arabia arrested and jailed poet
Abdul Mohsen Musalam and fired a newspaper editor following the
publication of Musalam's poem The Corrupt on Earth that
criticized the state's Islamic judiciary. In it, the poet accused
some judges of being corrupt and issuing unfair rulings for their
own personal benefit.
- The office of Canadian Parliamentary
Poet Laureate is instituted (see "Awards and honors" section
below)
- August 22 — Poet Ron Silliman starts his popular and
controversial weblog, Silliman's Blog, which will become one of
the most popular blogs devoted largely to contemporary poetry and
poetics. (By August 2006, the blog will reach a total of 800,000
hits and get its next 100,000 by early November.)[1].
- Fulcrum, An annual of poetry and
aesthetics is founded in the United States.
- August 27 in the United States; December 8 in Europe — Avril Lavigne's pop
song Sk8er Boi
comes out — about the award-winning Irish performance poet Gerard McKeown,
whom she had not met, but had seen performing in Belfast, Northern
Ireland while on tour there. The single reached number ten on the
United States Billboard Hot 100, number eight in
the United Kingdom, number three in Australia, number thirteen in
Canada and number one in Spain. Lavigne confirmed the connection in
a 2008 interview.
- Influential Chinese literary magazine Tamen
("They/Them") revived as a webzine at www.tamen.net.[2]
Works
published
Listed by nation where the work was first published and again by
the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works
listed separately:
- Alison
Croggon, Attempts at Being, Salt Publishing, ISBN
1876857420.
- Robert
Gray, Afterimages
- Emma Lew, Anything
the Landlord Touches, won the 2003 C. J. Dennis Prize for
Poetry and was short-listed for the Kenneth Slessor Prize for
Poetry that same year
- Chris
Mansell:
- Stalking the Rainbow (PressPress, 2002)
- Fickle Brat (IP Digital, Brisbane, 2002)
- Les
Murray:
- Poems the Size of Photographs, Duffy & Snellgrove
and Carcanet[3]
- New Collected Poems, Duffy & Snellgrove; Carcanet,
2003[3]
- Margaret
Avison, Concrete and Wild Carrot
- Christian
Bök, ’Pataphysics: The Poetics of an Imaginary
Science ISBN 978-0-8101-1877-5
- Michael Boughn, Dislocations in Crystal (Coach House
Books) ISBN 9781552451113
- Louis Cabri, The Mood Embosser (Coach House Books)
ISBN 9781552450956
- Margaret Christakos, Excessive
Love Prostheses (Coach House Books) ISBN 9781552451021
- Lise Downe, Disturbances of Progress (Coach House
Books) ISBN 9781552451120
- Rob Fitterman, Metropolis (Book 2) (Coach House Books)
ISBN 9781552451045
- Laura Lush:
- The First Day of Winter: Poetry, Vancouver: Ronsdale
Press
- Going to the Zoo, Winnipeg: Turnstone Press
- Don McKay, Vis à
Vis: Field Notes on Poetry & Wilderness
- George
McWhirter, The Book of Contradictions
- Jay Millar, Mycological Studies (Coach House Books)
ISBN 9781552451038
- P. K. Page,
Planet Earth: Poems Selected and New, edited and with an
introduction by Eric
Ormsby, Erin, Ontario: Porcupine's Quill[4]
- Vona Groarke,
Flight, Oldcastle: The Gallery Press, Ireland
- Justin Quinn:
- Fuselage Oldcastle: The Gallery Press,
- Gathered Beneath the Storm: Wallace Stevens, Nature and
Community, University College of Dublin Press, 2002
(criticism)
- James K.
Baxter, The Tree House: James K. Baxter's Poems for
Children (posthumous), the first illustrated edition of his
work for children
- Janet Charman, Snowing Down South, Auckland: Auckland
University Press[5]
- Alan Brunton, Fq, a sequence of 144 poems
(posthumous)[6
]
- Cilla
McQueen, Soundings, Otago University Press[7]
- Mike Minehan, O Jerusalem: James K. Baxter an Intimate
Memoir
- Kendrick Smithyman, posthumous:
- Last Poems, Auckland: Holloway Press, designed by Tara
hir poi a pek fhj nbb a: Auckland University Press
Poets in Best New Zealand
Poems
Best New Zealand Poems
series, an annual online anthology, is started this year with
Iain Sharp as the
first annual editor. Twenty-five poems by 25 New Zealand poets are
selected from the previous year. The first selection is called
Best New Zealand Poetry 2001. Unlike The Best American
Poetry series, the year named in each edition refers to the
year the poems were originally published, not the following year,
when the collection is put together and made public. Sharp chose
poems published in 2001 from these poets:
|
|
|
- Bernadette Hall
- Dinah Hawken
- Anna Jackson
- Jan Kemp
- James Naughton
|
|
|
- Ciarán
Carson: The Inferno of Dante Alighieri (translator),
Granta, awarded the Oxford-Weidenfeld
Translation Prize
- Carol Ann
Duffy, Feminine Gospels Picador[8]
- Elaine
Feinstein, Collected Poems and Translations,
Carcanet
- James Fenton:
An Introduction to English Poetry[9]
- Paul
Henry, The Slipped Leash, Seren
- Ted Hughes,
Selected Poems, 1957-1994 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux); a
New York Times "notable book of the year"
- Glyn Maxwell,
The Nerve (Houghton Mifflin); a New York Times
"notable book of the year" (British poet living in America, poetry
editor of The New Republic magazine)
- Sean O'Brien:
- Cousin Coat: Selected Poems 1976-2001 (Picador)
- With John Kinsella and Peter
Porter, Rivers (Fremantle Arts Centre Press,
Australia)
- Alice Oswald:
- Dart, Faber and Faber, ISBN 0-571-21410-X
- Co-editor, with Peter Oswald and Robert
Woof), Earth Has Not Any Thing to Shew More Fair: A
Bicentennial Celebration of Wordsworth's "Sonnet Composed upon
Westminster Bridge" Shakespeare's Globe & The
Wordsworth Trust, ISBN 1-870787-84-6
- John
Heath-Stubbs, The Return of the Cranes
- Peter
Redgrove, From the Virgil Caverns
- R.S. Thomas, Residues
(posthumous)
- Hugo
Williams, Collected Poems, Faber and Faber
- John Ashbery,
Chinese Whispers
- Frank Bidart,
Music Like Dirt (Sarabande Books), the only poetry chapbook ever nominated for a
Pulitzer
Prize
- Billy
Collins, Nine Horses: Poems (Random House); a New
York Times "notable book of the year" (ISBN
0-375-50381-1)
- Robert
Creeley edits The Best American Poetry 2002
- Alan Dugan,
Poems Seven: New and Complete Poetry (Seven Stories); a
New York Times "notable book of the year"
- Michael
S. Harper, Selected Poems, ARC Publications[10]
- Paul Hoover,
Winter Mirror, (Flood Editions)
- Kenneth Koch:
- Sun Out: Selected Poems, 1952-1954, New York:
Knopf[11]
- A Possible World, New York: Knopf[11]
- Abba Kovner,
Sloan-Kettering: Poems (Schocken); a New York
Times "notable book of the year"
- Brad
Leithauser, Darlington's Fall: A Novel in Verse
(Knopf); a 5,700-line verse novel in 10-line stanzas, irregularly
rhymed; a New York Times "notable book of the year"
- Glyn Maxwell,
The Nerve (Houghton Mifflin); a New York Times
"notable book of the year" (British poet living in America, poetry
editor of The New Republic magazine)
- J.D. McClatchy, Hazmat: Poems
(Knopf); a New York Times "notable book of the year"
- Czesław Miłosz, New and Collected
Poems: 1931-2001 (Ecco/HarperCollins); a New York
Times "notable book of the year"
- Paul Muldoon,
Moy Sand and Gravel, winner of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and
Griffin Poetry Prize and
shortlisted for the 2002 T. S. Eliot Prize
- Lorine
Niedecker, Lorine Niedecker: Collected Works, edited
by Jenny Penberthy (University of California Press),
posthumous
- Mary Oliver,
What Do We Know
- Molly
Peacock, Cornucopia: New & Selected Poems
- Carl
Phillips, Rock Harbor[12]
- Marie Ponsot,
Springing: New and Selected Poems (Knopf); a New York
Times "notable book of the year"
- Margaret Reynolds, editor, The Sappho Companion
(scholarship) Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 9780312295103 ISBN
0312295103
- W. G. Sebald,
After Nature (Random House); a book-length poem; a New
York Times "notable book of the year"
- Aharon
Shabtai, Artzenu (Hebrew: "Our Land")
- Adam
Zagajewski, Without End: New and Selected Poems
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux); a New York Times "notable
book of the year"
Poets in The Best
American Poetry 2002
Poems from these 75 poets were in The Best American Poetry
2002, David
Lehman, editor; Robert Creeley, guest editor:
Works published in other
languages
- Han Dong:
- Baba zai tianshang kan wo ("Daddy's Watching Me in
Heaven"), Hebei: jiaoyu chubanshe,[2]
- Jiaocha paodong ("Running Criss-cross"), Dunhuang:
wenyi chubanshe[2]
- He Xiaozhu, 6 ge dongci, huo pingguo ("6 Verbs, or
Apples"), Hebei: jiaoyu chubanshe[13]
- Jimu Langge, Jingqiaoqiao de zuolun ("The silent
revolver"), Hebei: jiaoyu chubanshe[14]
Other
languages
- Klaus Høeck, Projekt Perseus, publisher: Arena; Denmark[15]
- Rami Saari,
Kamma, Kamma milxama ("So Much, So Much War"), Israel[16]
- Wisława Szymborska: Chwila
("Moment"), Poland
- Søren Ulrik Thomsen, Det værste
og det bedste, illustrated by Ib Spang Olsen; Denmark
- Chris Wallace-Crabbe, La
Poésie Australienne, Valenciennes: Presses Universitaires,
(with Simone Kadi), French translation of the work of
this Australian poet
Awards and
honors
- Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement:
- Montana New Zealand Book
Awards (no poetry category winner this year) First-book award
for poetry: Chris Price, Husk, Auckland University
Press
- Cholmondeley Award: Moniza Alvi, David
Constantine, Liz
Lochhead, Brian
Patten
- Eric
Gregory Award: Caroline Bird, Christopher
James, Jacob
Polley, Luke Heeley, Judith Lal, David Leonard Briggs, Eleanor
Rees, Kathryn
Simmonds
- Forward Poetry Prize Best
Collection): Peter Porter, Max is
Missing (Picador); Best First Collection: Tom French,
Touching the Bones (The Gallery Press)
- Queen's Gold Medal for
Poetry: Peter Porter
- T. S.
Eliot Prize (United Kingdom and Ireland): Alice Oswald,
Dart
- Whitbread Award for poetry (United
Kingdom):
- Agnes Lynch Starrett
Poetry Prize awarded to Shao Wei for Pulling a
Dragon's Teeth
- Aiken Taylor
Award for Modern American Poetry, Grace Schulman
- Arthur
Rense Prize for poetry awarded to B.H. Fairchild by
the American Academy of
Arts and Letters
- Bernard F. Connors Prize for Poetry, Timothy
Donnelly, "His Long Imprison'd Thought"
- Bobbitt National Prize
for Poetry, Alice
Fulton for Felt
- Brittingham Prize in
Poetry, Anna George Meek, Acts of Contortion
- Frost Medal: Galway Kinnell
- National Book Award for poetry (United
States): Ruth Stone,
In the Next Galaxy
- Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Carl Dennis,
Practical Gods
- Robert Fitzgerald Prosody
Award: Paul
Fussell
- Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize: Lisel Mueller
- Wallace Stevens Award: Ruth Stone
- William Carlos Williams
Award: Li-Young
Lee, Book of My Nights (American Poets Continuum),
Judge: Carolyn
Kizer
- Fellowship of the Academy of American
Poets: Sharon
Olds
Other
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry"
article:
- June 14 – June
Jordan, American poet, of breast cancer
- June 27 – Alan Brunton (born 1946), New Zealand
poet and scriptwriter[6
]
- July 6 – Kenneth
Koch, American poet, of leukemia
- July 14 – Nabakanta Barua, also known as Ekhud
Kokaideu, (born (1926), Assamese-language
Indian novelist
and poet
- August 25 – Dorothy Hewett (born 1923), Australian poet and
playwright
- September 27 – Charles Henri Ford, 89, American
novelist, poet, filmmaker, photographer, and collage artist
- October 21 – Harbhajan Singh (born 1920), Punjabi
poet, critic, cultural commentator, and translator
- October 28 – Annadashankar Roy (born 1905), Bengali poet
- December 9 – Stan
Rice, American painter, educator, poet,
husband of author Anne
Rice
Notes
- ^
In his blog entry for Saturday, November 04, 2006 link here Silliman takes
note of the following statistics: "In 2002-03, it took 50 weeks to
get the first 50,000 visits. The last 100,000 came in just 14
(weeks)".
- ^ a
b
c
Simon Patten, "Han Dong", article,
Poetry International website, retrieved November 22, 2009
- ^ a
b
[1]Les Murray Web
page at The Poetry Archive Web site, accessed October 15, 2007
- ^
Web page titled "Canadian Poets / P.K. Page,
Published Works", at the University of Toronto Library website,
retrieved January 3, 2009
- ^
Robinson, Roger and Wattie, Nelson, The Oxford Companion to New
Zealand Literature, 1998, "Janet Charman" article
- ^ a
b
Robinson, Roger and Wattie, Nelson, The Oxford Companion to New
Zealand Literature, 1998, pp. 75-76, "Alan Brunton" article by
Peter Simpson
- ^
Cilla McQueen - NZ Literature
File - LEARN - The University Of Auckland Library
- ^ O’Reilly, Elizabeth
(either author of the "Critical Perspective" section or of the
entire contents of the web page, titled "Carol Ann Duffy" at
Contemporary Poets website, retrieved May 4, 2009. Archived 2009-05-08.
- ^ [2]Web page titled
"Books by Fenton" at the James Fenton Web site, accessed October
11, 2007
- ^ Web page titled "Michael S.
Harper" at the Academy of American poets website, accessed
April 23, 2008
- ^ a
b
Web page titled "Archives / Kenneth Koch (1925
- 2002)" at Poetry Foundation website, accessed May 15,
2008
- ^
McClatchy, J. D., editor, The Vintage Book of Contemporary
American Poetry, second edition, Vintage Books (Random House),
2003
- ^
Daton, D., "He Xiaozhu", article at
the Poetry International website, retrieved November 22, 2008
- ^
Dayton, D., "Jimu Langge", article at
the Poetry International website, retrieved November 22, 2008
- ^ Web page titled [stage=5&tx_lfforfatter_pi2[uid]=115&tx_lfforfatter_pi2[lang]=_eng
"Bibliography of Klaus Høeck"], website of the Danish Arts Agency /
Literature Centre, retrieved January 1, 2010
- ^
Page titled "Rami Saari" at
the Modern Hebrew Literature Bio-Bibliographical Lexicon,
2007
- [3] "A Timeline of
English Poetry" Web page of the Representative Poetry Online Web
site, University of Toronto
See also