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Sylvia Plath
 

     The American poet Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) was born in Boston, Massachusetts. She was educated at Smith College and Newnham College, Cambridge, where she met her husband, the poet Ted Hughes. In 1953, following a month in New York City working as one of a dozen “Guest Editors” on the fashion magazine Mademoiselle, Plath suffered a bout of depression, attempted suicide, and was hospitalized for six months, these events from the gist of her novel, The Bell Jar (1963). In 1958 she attended Robert Lowell’s verse writing seminar at Boston University, where the pot Anne Sexton was a fellow student. In 1963, following the dissolution of her marriage, she suffered another bout of depression and committed suicide. Like Lowell and Sexton, Plath is generally considered a “confessional” poet. Her short life was marked by periods of severe depression and her poetry is notable for its controlled and intense treatment of extremely painful states of mind. In 1963 she committed suicide. It was only through the posthumous publication of Ariel (1965) that she gained wide recognition. She also wrote a novel, The Bell Jar (1963).

    Amiri Baraka (1934) was born LeRoi Jones in Newark, New Jersey. He earned a B.A. from Howard University and an M.A from Columbia University. From 1954 until 1956 he lived in the United States Air Force. Read More...

    W. H. Auden (1907-1973), British-born poet, was educated at Oxford. Deeply feeling the impact of the early thirties’ unemployment in England, he and his friends developed a social conscience which resembled communism, Look Stranger! (1936) is the collection of poems that secured his position as a leading left-wing poet. Read More...

     Cynthia Zarin (1959) was born in New York City and raised on Long Island. She was educated at Harvard College & Columbia University. A staff writer at The Now Yorker from 1985 until 1994, she currently teaches at Princeton University & lives in New York City, where she is a writer-in-residence at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. Read More...

     Cathy Song (1955) a descendant of Korean immigrants, was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, and raised in Wahiawa, a village on the island of Oahu. She was educated at the University of Hawaii, Wellesley College, and Boston University, and her first book, Picture Bride (1982), was published in the Yale series of Younger Poets. Read More...

     Denise Levertov (1923-1997) was born in Ilford, Essex (England), and educated at home. After working as a nurse in London during World War II, she immigrated to the United States in 1948. From 1956 to 1959 she lived in Mexico. She then taught at, among other schools, Stanford University. In addition to poetry, she published two collections of prose. Read More...

    Dylan Thomas (1914-1953). Welsh poet. Born in Swansea, he was the son of a schoolmaster. He worked for a time as a reporter for the South Wales Evening Post and established himself with the publication of Eighteen Poems in 1934, in which year he moved to London, later settling permanently back in Wales at Laugharne. Read More...

     Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. After her father’s death in 1911 and her mother’s permanent hospitalization for mental illness in 1917, Bishop lived with relatives in Nova Scotia and Massachusetts. She was educated at Vassar College, and while there Bishop met the poet Marianne Moore, who recognized her promise and became her mentor. Read More...

    Margaret Atwood (1939) was born in Ottawa, Canada, and raised there and in Toronto. As a child, she spent much time in the woods of northern Quebec, where her father conducted entomological research. Educated at the University of Toronto, Radcliffe College and Harvard University, Atwood has taught at a number of Canadian universities and has worked as an editor for the Anansi publishing house. Read More...

     Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, to a prominent family. For one year she attended Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (now College), in nearby South Hadley, then withdrew and returned to Amherst. Her adult life was as short on external incident as it was long on imagination. Read More...

    Langston Hughes (1902-67), born in Missouri is a major figure of the Harlem Renaissance. He led a nomadic life in the U.S. and Europe until he began his prolific literary career with The Weary Blues (1926), poems on black themes in jazz rhythms and idiom, whose success made possible his college career at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania. His concern with his race, mainly in an urban setting is evident in his works, as is his social consciousness. Read More...

    N. Scott Momaday (1934) was born in Lawton Oklahoma, a member of the Kiowa Native American tribe. He was educated at the University of New Mexico and Stanford University, from which he received a Ph.D. Read More...

     Rita Dove (1952) was born in Akron, Ohio. She was educated at Miami University (Ohio), the University of Tubingen (Germany), and the University of lowa, and has taught at Arizona State University and the University of Virginia. Dove has traveled widely and has lived abroad, notably in Berlin and Jerusalem. Read More...

     Roy Campbell (1902-1957) born in Natal, came to England in 1918. In 1924 he published, to great acclaim. The Flaming Terrapin, an exuberant allegorical narrative of the Flood, in which he terrapin represents energy and rejuvenation. Read More...

 
 
 
 
 

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