Title: Marilyn Hacker
When: Wed, Nov 2 2005 | 7:30PM
Where
: Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum - New Brunswick
Category
: Writers at Rutgers Reading Series

 

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Admission: Free and open to the Rutgers community and the general public
The reading will be followed by a reception and book signing

Biography

Marilyn Hacker is an award-winning poet, translator, and editor.  She is also a renowned teacher, a cancer survivor, and a prominent lesbian activist.  She has published eleven books of poetry, beginning with Presentation Piece in 1974, which won the National Book Award for Poetry.  Her other volumes include Love, Death, and the Changing of the Seasons (1986), Squares and Courtyards (2000), and, most recently, Desesperanto (2003).

Described as a neo-formalist, Hacker uses traditional poetic forms as a vehicle to explore contemporary themes.  In her latest volume, she writes an ode to the two cities she calls home: Paris and New York City.  Publishers Weekly celebrates Desesperanto for its combination of “lucid, almost chatty autobiography, outspoken progressive politics and a casual mastery of elaborate forms.”

Hacker was born in the Bronx, the only child of working-class Jews who were the first in their respective families to attend  university.  As editor of The Kenyon Review from 1990 to 1994, she encouraged the work of a number of emerging women, minority, and gay and lesbian writers.  Her writing has appeared in anthologies of gay and lesbian poetry and in collections focusing on AIDS and women’s illnesses.

Hacker received the Lambda Literary Award and The Nation’s Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize for Winter Numbers (1994), and the Poet’s Prize in 1996 for Selected Poems, 1965-1990 (1994).  Her other honors include the Bernard F. Conners Prize from The Paris Review, the John Masefield Memorial Award of the Poetry Society of America, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Ingram Merrill Foundation.  She lives in New York City and Paris.

Amitav Ghosh is a novelist, essayist, and anthropologist celebrated worldwide for his writing.  His novel The Shadow Lines won the Sahitya Akademi Award, India’s most prestigious literary prize; another novel, The Circle of Reason, received the Prix Medici Étranger, one of France’s top literary awards. Educated in Delhi, Oxford, and Alexandria, Ghosh has taught comparative literature at Queens College in the City University of New York and at Columbia University.

Born in Calcutta, India, Ghosh lives with his family in Brooklyn, New York.