Carolyne Wright

Carolyne Wright
Born Bellingham, Washington
Language English
Nationality American
Education Seattle University,
New York University
Alma mater Syracuse University
Genre Poetry

Carolyne Wright (born Bellingham, Washington) is an American poet.

Life

She studied at Seattle University, New York University, and graduated from Syracuse University with master's and doctoral degrees.[1]

She has held visiting creative writing posts at Radcliffe College, Sweet Briar College, Emory University, University of Wyoming, University of Miami, Oklahoma State University, University of Central Oklahoma, University of Oklahoma, The College of Wooster,[2] and Cleveland State University.

She is Translation Editor of Artful Dodge.[3] Her work appeared in AGNI,[4] Artful Dodge, Hotel Amerika, Hunger Mountain, Iowa Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, New England Review, New Orleans Review, North American Review, Poetry, Poets & Writers, Southern Review.

From 2004-2008, she served on the Board of Directors of the Association of Writers & Writing Programs (AWP). Since 2005, she teaches at the Whidbey Writers Workshop.[5] In 2008, she is Thornton Poet in Residence at Lynchburg College,[6] and Distinguished Northwest Poet at Seattle University. She lives in Seattle.[7]

Awards

Works

Anthologies

Memoir

Translations

Reviews

Carolyne Wright's journey through nearly four decades shows that the past is often a world that resists disclosure, and yet the fact is less a fact about the past than a fact about our ability to find signposts among contingent scenarios. Wright has this ability; which is less a concession to the spell of technique (which she owns) than a kind of knowledge about poetry's secret sway and coterie wisdom and therefore of abiding interest to poetry's serious readers—be they ever so few—who know that the intramural is what we used to call the universal, but know also that that is no come-down but a field promotion fitting for the lean hereafter.[8]
Carolyne Wright's latest poetry collection, A Change of Maps, may remind those with keen memories of Matthew Arnold's poem "The Scholar Gipsy," in which a mysterious male figure abandons the safety of Oxford's "dreaming spires" to wander the world in search of truth.[9]

References

External links

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