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American poet (born 1950) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marianne Boruch (born June 19, 1950) is an American poet whose published work also includes essays on poetry, sometimes in relation to other fields (music, visual art, ornithology, medicine, aviation, etc.) and a memoir about a hitchhiking trip taken in 1971.
Marianne Boruch | |
---|---|
Born | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. | June 19, 1950
Occupation | Poet |
Nationality | American |
Education | University of Illinois University of Massachusetts Amherst (MFA) |
Notable awards | Pushcart Prize (1988, 2001, 2012, 2016) Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award (2013) |
Born and raised Catholic in Chicago, Boruch was educated in parish schools and spent many summers in Tuscola, Illinois with her grandparents. She graduated from the University of Illinois, then earned her MFA from the University of Massachusetts Amherst where her MFA thesis advisor was James Tate. She has taught at Tunghai University in Taiwan, and at the University of Maine at Farmington, going on, in 1987, to develop and direct the MFA program in creative writing at Purdue University where she continues as a professor emeritus.[1][2]
Since 1988, she has also taught semi-regularly in the low-residency MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.[3] On occasion, she's run workshops and given lectures and readings at summer writers' conferences, among them Bread Loaf, the Haystack School of the Arts, Bear River, and RopeWalk.[4]
Her poems and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, American Poetry Review, The Yale Review, The Georgia Review, The Paris Review, The London Review of Books, The Massachusetts Review, The Hudson Review, New England Review, Ploughshares, Poetry London,"The New York Review of Books", "The Nation", "Narrative", FIELD, Poetry 180, Poets of the New Century, Poets Reading: The FIELD Symposia, Hammer and Blaze: A Gathering of Poets, American Alphabets: 25 Contemporary Poets, Best American Poetry, and elsewhere.
She lives with her husband in West Lafayette, Indiana.
Her poetry collection, The Book of Hours published in 2013 by Copper Canyon Press, won the 2013 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award.[7] Her most recent collection, Eventually One Dreams the Real Thing, was published in 2016 by Copper Canyon Press.
Her awards include fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation,[8] and the National Endowment for the Arts, and residencies at MacDowell, Yaddo, The Anderson Center (Red Wing, MN), Hall Farm, Djerassi, and the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Center.
She's been a Visiting Artist at the American Academy in Rome, and an Artist-in-Residence at two National Parks, Denali and Isle Royale. She was awarded a Fulbright/Visiting Professorship at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland in 2012, as well as a fellowship in that University's Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities. In 2019, she was appointed as a Senior Fulbright Scholar to the University of Canberra, Australia.[9]
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