Esther Phillips (poet)

Last updated
Esther Phillips
Born1950 (age 7374)
Saint George, Barbados
OccupationPoet
Education Barbados Community College; University of Miami
Notable worksLeaving Atlantis
Notable awardsPoet laureate of Barbados
Partner George Lamming

Esther Phillips (born 1950) is a Barbadian poet. She became the first poet laureate of Barbados in 2018. [1] [2]

Contents

Biography

Phillips was born in 1950 in Saint George, Barbados, [3] [4] growing up in a village called Greens. [1] [5] She began writing at a young age, publishing her first poem in BIM , the country's main literary magazine, around 1959. [6]

She was educated at St Michael's Girls’ School and Barbados Community College at the University of the West Indies at Cave Hill in the early 1970s, part of the first class of students to attend the college. [1] [7] She continued to write poetry in this period, and in 1983 she published her first chapbook, La Monte, through the University of the West Indies. [8]

In the 1990s, Phillips moved to the United States to study at the University of Miami under a James Michener fellowship. [9] She graduated with an MFA in creative writing in 1999, and her thesis poetry collection was awarded the Alfred Boas Poetry Prize of the Academy of American Poets. [1]

Phillips returned to Barbados and received the Frank Collymore Literary Endowment Award to continue her writing in 2001. She published her first full-length poetry collection, When Ground Doves Fly, in 2003. This was followed by the collections The Stone Gatherer (2009) and Leaving Atlantis (2015), [1] the latter of which won the national Governor General's Award for Literary Excellence in 2016. [10] [11] Her most recent book is Witness in Stone (2021). [12]

Her work is influenced by her childhood in the countryside and her Christian faith, as well as the country's folk culture and history of colonialism. [1] [3] [13]

She has co-edited the long-standing literary magazine BIM since 2007. [14] After founding the Writers Ink Inc. collective, [14] [15] Phillips and fellow members of the collective created the Bim Literary Festival and Book Fair, and a corresponding children's literature festival, in 2012. [1] [8]

Philips produces the radio show What’s That You’re Reading? for the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation [14] [10] and has also been a Sunday columnist of the Nation newspaper. [9] She is the chair of the Frank Collymore Literary Endowment Committee [14] [16] and taught for many years at Barbados Community College. [7] She now also teaches writing in the country's prison system. [13]

In 2018, Phillips was named as the first poet laureate of Barbados, a three-year position chosen by the country's cabinet and bestowed by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Youth. [1] [2]

Selected works

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank Collymore</span> Barbadian poet (1893–1980)

Frank Appleton Collymore MBE was a Barbadian literary editor, writer, poet, stage performer and painter. His nickname was "Barbadian Man of the Arts". He also taught for 50 years at Combermere School, where he sought out and encouraged prospective writers in his classes, notably George Lamming and Austin Clarke. Collymore was the founder and long-time editor of pioneering Caribbean literary magazine BIM.

Caribbean literature is the literature of the various territories of the Caribbean region. Literature in English from the former British West Indies may be referred to as Anglo-Caribbean or, in historical contexts, as West Indian literature. Most of these territories have become independent nations since the 1960s, though some retain colonial ties to the United Kingdom. They share, apart from the English language, a number of political, cultural, and social ties which make it useful to consider their literary output in a single category. The more wide-ranging term "Caribbean literature" generally refers to the literature of all Caribbean territories regardless of language—whether written in English, Spanish, French, Hindustani, or Dutch, or one of numerous creoles.

Kyk-Over-Al is a literary magazine published in Guyana, and is one of the three pioneering literary magazines founded in the 1940s that helped define postwar West Indian literature. Kyk-Over-Al is indelibly associated with the Guyanese poet and editor A. J. Seymour, the magazine's longtime editor. After Seymour's death in 1989 the editorship was assumed by poet and novelist Ian McDonald.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Luisa Igloria</span> American poet

Luisa A. Igloria is a Filipina American poet and author of various award-winning collections, and is the most recent Poet Laureate of Virginia (2020-2022).

Elizabeth "Betsy" Sholl is an American poet who was poet laureate of Maine from 2006 to 2011 and has authored nine collections of poetry. Sholl has received several poetry awards, including the 1991 AWP Award, and the 2015 Maine Literary Award, as well as receiving fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Maine Arts Commission.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ada Limón</span> American writer (born 1976)

Ada Limón is an American poet. On July 12, 2022, she was named the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States by the Librarian of Congress. This made her the first Latina to be Poet Laureate of the United States.

Denise Low is an American poet, honored as the second Kansas poet laureate (2007–2009). A professor at Haskell Indian Nations University, Low taught literature, creative writing and American Indian studies courses at the university. She was succeeded by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg on July 1, 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samiya Bashir</span> American writer

Samiya A. Bashir is a queer American artist, poet, and author. Much of Bashir's poetry explores the intersections of culture, change, and identity through the lens of race, gender, the body and sexuality. She is currently the June Jordan visiting professor at Columbia University of New York. Bashir is the first black woman recipient of the Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize in Literature. She was also the third black woman to serve as tenured professor at Reed College in Portland, Oregon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julie Kane</span> American poet

Julie Kane is a contemporary American poet, scholar, and editor and was the Louisiana Poet Laureate for the 2011–2013 term.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Larry D. Thomas</span> American poet

Larry D. Thomas is an American poet. He was the 2008 Texas Poet Laureate, and in 2009 was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters.

Anthony Kellman is a Barbados-born poet, novelist, and musician.

BIM is a distinguished "little magazine" first published in Barbados in 1942. It was one of two pioneering Caribbean literary journals to have been established in the 1940s, the other being A. J. Seymour's Kyk-Over-Al in British Guiana in 1945. According to the Barbados National Register, on the submission of 16 volumes of BIM magazine together with the associated Frank Collymore Collection of correspondence in 2008:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Beth Ann Fennelly</span> American poet and writer

Beth Ann Fennelly is an American poet and prose writer and was the Poet Laureate of Mississippi.

Linda M. Deane is an English-born writer and editor living in Barbados.

Danielle Legros Georges is a Haitian-born American poet, essayist and academic. She is a professor of creative writing in the Lesley University MFA Program in Creative Writing. Her areas of focus include contemporary American poetry, African-American poetry, Caribbean literature and studies, literary translation, and the arts in education. She is the creative editor of sx salon, a digital forum for innovative critical and creative explorations of Caribbean literature.

Hazel Simmons-McDonald is a St. Lucian writer and linguist. She is known for her work as a professor and administrator at the University of the West Indies, as well as her poetry, which has been published in periodicals, anthologies, and the 2004 collection Silk Cotton and Other Trees.

Rosamond S. King is an American poet and literary theorist. She is a literature professor at Brooklyn College, where her courses focus on Caribbean and African literature, sexuality, and performance. In 2017, she won the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Poetry for her debut poetry collection, Rock | Salt | Stone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katherine Indermaur</span> Writer and poet

Katherine Indermaur is a writer, poet, and magazine editor. In 2008, she was appointed as the first North Carolina Student Poet Laureate by Kathryn Stripling Byer. She authored the 2018 chapbook PULSE, the 2021 chapbook Facing the Mirror: An Essay, and the 2022 poetry book I/I. She is a recipient of the 2018 Academy of American Poets Prize, the 2019 Black Warrior Review Poetry Prize, and 2022 Deborah Tall Lyric Essay Book Prize. Indermaur was a runner-up in 92nd Street Y's Discovery Poetry Contest in 2020. In 2023, she was the recipient of the Colorado Book Award for poetry. Indermaur is an editor at Sugar House Review and previously served as managing editor at Colorado Review and as an assistant editor at Alpinist.

Monica Skeete was a Grenadian poet, writer and teacher. Her work was first published in the Barbadian literary magazine BIM in 1946. Her 1978 collection of short stories, Time Out, was published by Nelson Caribbean in their Authors of the Caribbean series, to support a growing educational market for Caribbean literature. Other short stories were anthologised in several publications. She also wrote novels. Much of her career was spent as a history teacher at Queen's College, Barbados. She died in 1997.

Philip Nanton is a Vincentian writer, poet and spoken-word performer, based in Barbados. A sociologist by training, who also teaches cultural studies, he is Honorary Research Associate at the University of Birmingham, and lectures at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill. He has been a contributor on Caribbean culture and literature to journals and magazines such as The Caribbean Review of Books, Shibboleths: a Journal of Theory and Criticism and Caribbean Quarterly, and as a spoken-word artist has performed his work at festivals internationally. In 2012, he represented St. Vincent & the Grenadines at Poetry Parnassus in London.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Shooman, Joe (2018-07-03). "'I'd love to see poetry explode'". Zing magazine. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  2. 1 2 Sealy, John (2018-03-14). "Esther Phillips is Barbados' first ever poet laureate". Nation News. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  3. 1 2 "Esther Phillips". Poetry Archive. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  4. Phillips, Esther (2010-10-16). "WORD VIEW: Boardwalk reflections". Nation News. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  5. Phillips, Esther (13 June 2010). "WORD VIEW - Tide of the heart - 1". Nation News. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  6. "Ten Questions: Esther Phillips". Caribbean Literary Heritage. 2018. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  7. 1 2 "A way with words". Barbados Today. 2018-10-17. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  8. 1 2 "Esther Phillips". African American Literature Book Club. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  9. 1 2 Bacchus, Rosaliene (2019-01-06). ""Unwritten Poem" – Poem by Barbados' First Poet Laureate Esther Phillips". Three Worlds One Vision. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  10. 1 2 Williams, Carol (2019-02-19). "Giving poetry its due". Barbados Today. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  11. Outar, Lisa (2016-11-21). "Esther Phillips' Two 2016 Awards". Journal of West Indian Literature. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  12. "Esther Phillips", Peepal Tree Press.
  13. 1 2 Palmer Adisa, Opal (Winter 2019). "Esther Phillips: The Literary Aspect of Our Culture Deserves Special Recognition" (PDF). Interviewing the Caribbean.
  14. 1 2 3 4 Lee, John Robert. "Esther Phillips: Vast Interiors". Arts Etc Barbados. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  15. "Esther Phillips". Bocas Lit Fest. 2019. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  16. "Barbados writers get boost". Caribbean Life News. 2019-01-11. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  17. "Esther Phillips". BIM Magazine Online. Retrieved 2020-09-28.