Susan Stewart (poet)

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Susan Stewart
11202012 FRSStewart 013.jpg
Born (1952-03-15) March 15, 1952 (age 72) [1]
NationalityAmerican
Education Dickinson College (BA)
Johns Hopkins University (MFA)
University of Pennsylvania (PhD)
Notable awards MacArthur Fellowship (1997)

Susan Stewart (born March 15, 1952) is an American poet and literary critic. She is the Avalon Foundation University Professor in the Humanities and Professor of English, emerita, at Princeton University. [2] In 2023, she was elected to the American Philosophical Society. [3]

Contents

Life

Professor Stewart holds degrees from Dickinson College (B.A. in English and anthropology), the Johns Hopkins University (M.F.A. in poetics) and the University of Pennsylvania (Ph.D. in folklore). She teaches the history of poetry, aesthetics, and the philosophy of literature, most recently at Princeton University. [4]

Her poems have appeared in many journals including: The American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Poetry, Tri-Quarterly, Gettysburg Review, Harper's, Georgia Review, Ploughshares, and Beloit Poetry Journal.

In the late 2000s she collaborated with composer James Primosch on a song cycle commissioned by the Chicago Symphony that premiered in the fall of 2009. She has served on the judging panel of the Wallace Stevens Award on six occasions.

In 2005 Professor Stewart was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. [5]

About her work, the poet and critic Allen Grossman has written,

Stewart has built a poetic syntax capable of conveying an utterly singular account of consciousness, by the light of which it is possible to see the structure of the human world with a new clarity and an unforeseen precision, possible only in her presence and by means of her art. [6]

Awards

Work

Criticism

Poetry

Cinder: New and Selected Poems (2017, Graywolf Press)

Translations

Anthologies

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References