Jay Wright (poet)

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Jay Wright
Born (1934-05-25) May 25, 1934 (age 90)
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Language English
Nationality American
GenrePoetry
Notable worksDimensions of History, The Double Invention of Komo, Explications/Interpretations, Transfigurations
Notable awards1986 MacArthur Fellowship, 1996 Fellowship of the Academy of American Poets, 2005 Bollingen Prize in Poetry, 2006 American Book Award Lifetime Achievement Award from the Before Columbus Foundation.
SpouseLois Wright

Jay Wright (born May 25, 1934 [1] ) is a poet, playwright, and essayist. Born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, [2] he lives in Bradford, Vermont. Although his work is not as widely known as other American poets of his generation, it has received considerable critical acclaim, with some comparing Wright's poetry to the work of Walt Whitman, T. S. Eliot and Hart Crane. [3] Others associate Wright with the African-American poets Robert Hayden and Melvin B. Tolson, due to his complexity of theme and language, as well as his work's utilization and transformation of the Western literary heritage. [4] Wright's work is representative of what the Guyanese-British writer Wilson Harris has termed the "cross-cultural imagination", inasmuch as it incorporates elements of African, European, Native American and Latin American cultures. [5] Following his receiving the Bollingen Prize in Poetry in 2005, Wright is recognized as one of the principal contributors to poetry in the early 21st century. Dante Micheaux has called Wright "unequivocally, the greatest living American poet"." [6]

Contents

Life and education

Wright's family origins are emblematic of the multi-cultural nature of his literary work. His mother, Leona Dailey, was born in Virginia and had both African and Native American ancestry, while his father, George Murphy, or Mercer Murphy Wright, as he was also known, claimed African, Cherokee and Irish roots. Murphy held diverse blue-collar jobs, which included working construction, driving a jitney, and working as a handyman. However, Wright grew up in foster care in Albuquerque, and moved to San Pedro, California, in his teens to live with his father. [5]

When he was in high school, Wright began to play bass, [5] and when Neil Arditi met him in the late 1990s, Wright was still performing as a jazz bassist. [7] Jazz music informs Wright's work and aesthetic in various ways, [8] in poems such as "Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting", "Billie's Blues", and "Twenty-Two Tremblings of the Postulant". [9] The poet's experience as a jazz bassist is referenced in the poem "The End of an Ethnic Dream": "Cigarettes in my mouth / to puncture blisters in my brain. / My bass a fine piece of furniture. / My fingers soft, too soft to rattle / rafters in second-rate halls." [9]

As a young man, Wright played minor-league baseball, appearing in 76 games over two seasons (1953–1954) with the Mexicali Eagles of the Arizona-Texas League and the Fresno Cardinals of the California League. [10] In 1954, Wright abandoned his baseball career to serve in the U.S. Army medical corps in Germany until 1957; in this period he was able to travel in many countries in Europe. [5]

Upon returning from Europe, Wright studied comparative literature at the University of California, Berkeley, and Rutgers University. [2] He received his BA from Berkeley in 1961, and his MA from Rutgers in 1967. [11] In 1964, he taught English and medieval history for a year at the Butler Institute in Guadalajara, Mexico. [5] After this experience, he returned to Rutgers to finish his MA and begin work on a PhD, but left before completing his doctoral degree. [5]

As a student at Rutgers, Wright lived in Harlem, where he met African-American writers associated with the Black Arts Movement (BAM), such as Larry Neal, LeRoi Jones, and Henry Dumas. [5] Wright would later write the introduction to Dumas' posthumously published collection of poetry, Play Ebony, Play Ivory: Poetry. [12] Wright has been described as a member of the Black Arts Movement, [13] although in a monograph dedicated to the movement, only Wright's first book, The Homecoming Singer, is discussed in connection with the group. [14] Indeed, Wright's poem "Idiotic and Politic", from The Homecoming Singer, has been read as "a virtual declaration of independence from BAM," addressed directly to LeRoi Jones (later Amiri Baraka), the founder of the Black Arts Movement. [7]

Over the years Wright has been poet in residence at Yale University as well as the University of Dundee and historically black colleges and universities such as Talladega College, Tougaloo College, and Texas Southern University.

Poetry

Wright's first publication was a 22-page chapbook entitled Death as History, which contained 15 poems, published in 1967 by Poets Press. Although this collection has never been republished, some of the poems were included in Wright's first full-length book, TheHomecoming Singer. [15] Wright himself has disowned the book in print, saying that it was not intended as a unified work, but merely as "a group of poems selected from those [he] had on hand". At the time the book was published, Wright was employed on a tour of black schools in the South for the Woodrow Wilson-National Endowment of the Arts program, and Carolyn Kizer thought he ought to have a book of poems; therefore, she helped him publish the book with Diane DiPrima of Poets Press. [16] In the poems that were not republished in The Homecoming Singer, the language, imagery and sensibility have been described as romantic and conventional in nature. In other poems from this collection, however, the tone, style and subject matter are not dissimilar to those found in poems published many years later as regards their concern for religious experience and the exploration of African myth and religion. [15]

In 1971, Wright's first full-length collection of poetry, The Homecoming Singer, was published by Corinth Press. This book included poems including "The Homecoming Singer", "The End of an Ethnic Dream", and "An Invitation to Madison County". In this book, Wright "attempts to bridge past and present and meditates on feelings of exclusion from society or personal identity using geographical settings as backdrops for the autobiographical persona's spiritual, emotional, and intellectual growth." [3] The poem that opens the volume, "Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting", has a narrator who is mostly detached from the scene described in the poem and then becomes ironically part of "the uncertain, inconclusive encounter between man and God in a Black church.". [15] The poem suggests an ambiguous, questioning attitude towards traditional religion that is revealed in the congregants' Africanization of Christianity: "They have closed their night / with what certainty they could, / unwilling to change their freedom for a god." [8] [3] [9] Critical reception of The Homecoming Singer was positive, and Wright was immediately recognized as a major voice. [3] The New York Times hailed it as "a tense and memorable collection", in which Wright "is making his way among troubled alternatives", in search of an independent black voice. [17] However, in contrast to Wright's later work, the themes of this book have been described as "conventional". [18]

While some critics argue for a change of direction in Wright's work after Death as History and TheHomecoming Singer (and some parts of Soothsayers and Omens), [19] [20] others find instead continuity and unity in the poet's work. [5] [15] Darryl Pinckney has argued that Wright's earlier poetry is more closely aligned with "the rebellious mood of the Sixties", referring in particular to the poems "Death as History" and "A Plea for the Politic Man". [19] In his review of the volume Selected Poems of Jay Wright, poet Robert B. Shaw also contrasts the earlier volumes with the poet's later work, saying that one may "accept (and enjoy)" the earlier poems "with fewer questions", in contrast to the esoteric difficulty and rigor of the later poems. [20] Charles H. Rowell associates the poems in The Homecoming Singer and in the second section of Soothsayers and Omens with confessional poetry in its focus on personal, autobiographical experience in contrast to the later poetry, which he characterizes as less immediately personal and grounded more in books and scholarship than in lived experience. [16]

However, in discussing Wright's first five volumes of poetry, from Death as History to The Double Invention of Komo, Gerald Barrax sees a thematic and technical unity, describing these books as "so remarkably unified and consistent in subject, theme, tone, and technique that they might all constitute a single work." [15] Indeed, Wright himself has suggested that his books up to Explications/Interpretations (excluding the disowned chapbook Death as History) constitute a unified, ordered series, "a dramatic process, with all its tensions and resolutions." [16] Furthermore, the back cover copy of 2007's The Guide Signs: Book One and Book Two suggests that that volume, together with the eight volumes brought together in Transfigurations: Collected Poems, should be read as a single work. [21]

Awards

Bibliography

Poetry

Plays

Prose

Anthologies

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References

  1. Jay Wright at poets.org.
  2. 1 2 Academy of American Poets. "About Jay Wright | Academy of American Poets". poets.org. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Jay Wright". Poetry Foundation. February 7, 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  4. Bader, Philip. African-American Writers. New York: Infobase Publishing, 2011.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Vera M. Kutzinski, “Jay Wright”, in Andrews, William L., Frances Smith Foster, and Trudier Harris, eds. The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature. Oxford University Press, 2001: 446–447.
  6. "A Different Center [by Dante Micheaux]". The Best American Poetry. September 4, 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  7. 1 2 "Dimensions of Jay Wright: An Appreciation : Parnassus Poetry" . Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  8. 1 2 Welburn, Ron (1993). "Jay Wright's Poetics: An Appreciation". MELUS. 18 (3): 51–70. doi:10.2307/468066. JSTOR   468066.
  9. 1 2 3 Transfigurations: Collected Poems. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 2000.[ page needed ]
  10. "Jay Wright", Baseball Reference.
  11. "Jay Wright". www.macfound.org. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  12. Wright, Jay. "Introduction", in Dumas, Henry. Play Ebony: Play Ivory. Random House, 1974: xvii–xxiii.
  13. Smethurst, James. "The Black Arts Movement and Historically Black Colleges and Universities" in Nelson, Alondra, et al. New thoughts on the Black arts movement. Rutgers University Press, 2006.[ page needed ]
  14. Smethurst, James Edward. The Black arts movement: Literary nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s. University of North Carolina Press, 2005.[ page needed ]
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Gruen, Erich S. (1970). "Review of Plebs and Princeps". The American Journal of Philology. 91 (4): 487–489. doi:10.2307/293093. JSTOR   293093.
  16. 1 2 3 Rowell, Charles H. (1983). "'The Unraveling of The Egg' an Interview With Jay Wright". Callaloo (19): 3–15. doi:10.2307/2930927. JSTOR   2930927.
  17. Kalstone, David (July 30, 1972). "The Homecoming Singer By Jay Wright. New York: Corinth Books. 95 pp. $3". The New York Times.
  18. Okpewho, Isidore (1991). "From a Goat Path in Africa: An Approach to the Poetry of Jay Wright". Callaloo. 14 (3): 692–726. doi:10.2307/2931494. JSTOR   2931494.
  19. 1 2 Pinckney, Darryl (2004). "You're in the Army Now". In Bloom, Harold (ed.). Jay Wright. Bloom's Modern Critical Views. Chelsea House. pp. 27–35. ISBN   978-0-7910-7661-3.
  20. 1 2 Shaw, Robert B. (1988). "Review of Selected Poems of Jay Wright". Poetry. 152 (1): 45–47. JSTOR   20601592.
  21. Wright, Jay. The Guide Signs: Book One and Book Two. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 1987.[ page needed ]