May Swenson
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May Swenson | |
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Born | May 28, 1913 Logan, Utah |
Died | December 28, 1989 (aged 76) Bethany Beach, Delaware |
Occupation | Poet and Playwright, Chancellor of Academy of American Poets |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Utah State University |
The first child of Margaret and Dan Arthur Swenson, she grew up as the eldest of 10 children in a Mormon household where Swedish was spoken regularly and English was a second language. As a lesbian, she was somewhat shunned by her family for religious reasons. Much of her later poetry works were devoted to children (e.g. the collection Iconographs, 1970). She also translated the work of contemporary Swedish poets, including the selected poems of Nobel laureate Tomas Tranströmer.
Contents
Personal life
Swenson attended Utah State University in Logan, graduating in the class of 1934 with a bachelor's degree. She taught poetry as poet-in-residence at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California at Riverside, Purdue University, and Utah State University. From 1959 to 1966 she worked as an manuscript reviewer at New Directions publishers. Swenson left New Directions Press in 1966 in an effort to focus completely on her own writing.[2] She also served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 1980 until her death in 1989. For the last twenty years of her life, she lived in Sea Cliff, New York.In 1936, Swenson worked as an editor and ghostwriter for a man called "Plat," who became her "boyfriend." "I think I should like to have a son by Plat," she wrote in her diary, "but I would not like to be married to any man, but only be myself."[3]
Her poems were published in Antaeus, The Atlantic Monthly, Carleton Miscellany, The Nation, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Saturday Review, Parnassus and Poetry. Her poem Question was also published in Stephenie Meyer's book The Host.
Awards and recognition
She received much recognition for her work. Some of which include:- American Introductions Prize in 1955;
- William Rose Benet Prize of the Poetry Society of America in 1959;
- Longview Foundation Award in 1959;
- National Institute of Arts and Letters Award in 1960;
- Brandeis University Creative Arts Award in 1967;
- Lucy Martin Donnelly Award of Bryn Mawr College in 1968;
- Shelley Poetry Award in 1968
- Guggenheim fellowship in 1959,
- Amy Lowell Traveling Scholarship in 1960,
- Ford Foundation grant in 1964
- Bollingen Prize for poetry in 1981,
- MacArthur Fellowship in 1987.
Style, imagery and eroticism
This section does not cite any references or sources. (March 2013) |
Legacy
Washington University in St. Louis, MO, houses most of the poet's documents and original manuscripts. This is the primary location for all scholarly materials on May Swenson. Information on May Swenson is also available from The Literary Estate of May Swenson, c/o of www.mayswensonsociety.org. All of Ms. Swenson's poems are covered by copyright and may not be used without written permission of The Literary Estate.Utah State University also has some archives that are part of the university's Olin Library State University (USU). The University has created the "May Swenson Project." Supported by students and teachers, it has publicized Swenson's work at USU, as well as her influence across the nation. In her name, USU has dedicated a May Swenson room in the English Department and another in the USU Merrill-Cazier Library. Funds are being sought to establish an endowed chair in Swenson's name.
The May Swenson Poetry Award, sponsored by Utah State University Press, is a competitive prize granted annually to an outstanding collection of poetry in English. Open to published and unpublished writers, with no limitation on subject, the competition honors May Swenson as one of America's most vital and provocative poets of the twentieth century. Judges for the competition have included Mary Oliver, Maxine Kumin, John Hollander, Mark Doty, Alice Quinn, Harold Bloom, Garrison Keillor, Edward Field and others from the first tier of American letters.
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Bibliography
Poetry:- Another Animal (Scribner, 1954);
- A Cage of Spines (Rinehart, 1958);
- To Mix with Time: New and Selected Poems (Scribner, 1963);
- Poems to Solve (for children "14-up") (Scribner, 1966);
- Half Sun Half Sleep (Scribner, 1967);
- The Shape of Death;
- More Poems to Solve (Scribner, 1968);
- Iconographs (Scribner, 1970);
- New & Selected Things Taking Place (Little, Brown, 1978);
- In Other Words (Knopf, 1987);
- Collected Poems (Library of America, 2013).
- Made With Words, ed. Gardner McFall (U of Mich Press, 1998).
- Windows and Stones: Selected Poems of Tomas Tranströmer (1972)
References
- Blood, Harold. "They have the numbers; we, the heights," Boston Review. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012.
- Poets.org - Poetry, Poems, Bios & More - May Swenson
- May Swenson: A Poet's Life in Photos by R. R. Knudson & Suzzane Bigelow with a foreword by Richard Wilbur (Utah State University Press, 1996), ISBN 0-87421-218-9, p. 39.
External links
- Works by or about May Swenson in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Weber Spring 1991, Volume 8.1 (Poetry)
- Swenson bio, Poets.org
- The May Swenson Papers at Washington University in St. Louis
- (for rights and permissions)[1]
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