Английская Википедия:Carl Dennis
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox person Carl Dennis (born September 17, 1939) is an American poet and educator. His book Practical Gods won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for poetry.
Life and work
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, on September 17, 1939, Dennis attended Oberlin College and the University of Chicago before receiving his bachelor's degree from the University of Minnesota in 1961. In 1966, Dennis received his Ph.D. in English literature from the University of California, Berkeley. That same year he became an assistant professor of English at University at Buffalo, where he has spent most of his career; in 2002, he became an artist-in-residence there. Dennis has also served on the faculty of the graduate program at Warren Wilson College.[1][2]
Dennis has received several prizes for his poetry in addition to the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, including a Fellowship at the Rockefeller Study Center in Bellagio, Italy, a Guggenheim Fellowship (1984), a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Poetry (1988), and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize (2000).
Dennis is the brother of American composer Robert Dennis.[2]
Dennis's poetry
Dennis writes often of quotidian, middle-class life, but beneath the modest, reasonably lighted surfaces of the poems lie unexpected possibilities that create contrast and vibrancy. An example from his 1984 collection The Near World is "The Man on My Porch Makes Me an Offer," which begins:
- "Above all houses in our town
- I've always loved this blue one you own
- With its round turret and big bay window.
- Do you dream about it the way I do?
- Wouldn't you be just as happy
- On a street with more trees
- In a larger house, whose columned porch
- Impresses every passer-by?
- Does it seem fair that you've won the right
- To gaze from these windows your whole life
- Merely because you saw them first,
- And consign me to a life of envy?"
William Slaughter has given a close reading of this poem in an essay[3] comparing poems by William Stafford, Dennis, and Louis Simpson. The form of Dennis's poem - a plainspoken, dramatic monologue - is fairly characteristic of his poetry. In the poem "Progressive Health" (from Practical Gods) Dennis uses a similar approach for a proposition that is a bioethicist's nightmare.
In some of his more recent poems, Dennis invokes guardian angels and other domestic deities to animate his poetry. In his 2004 review, David Orr wrote:[4] Шаблон:Quote
In his 1984 review, Tom Sleigh addressed the originality of Dennis's art:[5] Шаблон:Quote
Bibliography
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References
Further reading
- Шаблон:Cite web
- Шаблон:Cite web Dennis' faculty homepage at University at Buffalo.
- Шаблон:Cite web
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite web Biography and links to several of Dennis' poems.
Шаблон:PulitzerPrize PoetryAuthors 2001–2025 Шаблон:Authority control
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web University at Buffalo news release.
- ↑ 2,0 2,1 Шаблон:Cite web Article and Interview in UB Today, University at Buffalo's online alumni magazine.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite news Review of Carl Dennis's New and Selected Poems: 1974-2004.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite news Review of Carl Dennis's The Near World.
- Английская Википедия
- American male poets
- 20th-century American poets
- 21st-century American poets
- Jewish American poets
- Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winners
- Oberlin College alumni
- University of Minnesota alumni
- 1939 births
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- 21st-century American Jews
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