- Christian Hawkey
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Christian Hawkey (born 1969, in Pine Island, Florida) is an American poet.
Contents
Life and work
Christian Hawkey graduated from University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
He is author of three books of poetry: The Book of Funnels (Winner of the 2006 Kate Tufts Discovery Award), HourHour (published by Delirium Press in 2005), Citizen Of (released by Wave Books in 2007); and has been featured in Conjunctions, Volt, Denver Quarterly, Tin House, Crowd, BOMB, Chicago Review, Best American Poetry, Conduit, and PEN America[1]. His work has recently been translated into German[1] Slovene, French, and Portuguese; and he translates several contemporary German poets including Daniel Falb, Sabine Scho and Steffen Popp, and Austrian writer Ilse Aichinger.
He taught at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he edited jubilat.[2] He is an associate professor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He teaches in the English department, and the Writing for Publication, Performance, and Media Program.
Awards and recognition
He has received awards from the Poetry Fund and the Academy of American Poets, and was the recipient of the Creative Capital Innovative Literature Award in 2006. In 2008, he was a DAAD Artist-in-Berlin Fellow. In the Summer of 2010, Hawkey holds the Picador Guest Professorship for Literature at the University of Leipzig's Institute for American Studies in Leipzig, Germany.
Works
- "Stars are shredding machines; From my mother's sleep". PEN America 10: Fear Itself. http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/3386/prmID/1502.
- "SONNETS IN THE MOUTH OF AN ELIZABETHAN WOLF", The Sienese Shredder #2
- Hues for the Watchman. 1999.
- The Book of Funnels. Verse Press. 2004. ISBN 9780972348799.
- HourHour. Drawings Ryan Mrozowski. Delirium Press. 2005. ISBN 9780973795028.
- Citizen Of. Wave Books. 2007. ISBN 9781933517162.
reviews
He has the perfect hipster sense of language, the way to turn the phrase and turn the image so that it continually unfolds along its opposite edge, bringing the idea back onto itself before moving forward again. He can flip his tonal register at any moment by sliding quickly along a new linguistic thread. His writing is not narrative or linear, but rather (dare I say it), rhizomatic—each phrase, clause and word offering a new branch of exploration.[3]
Sources
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=s0w3PQAACAAJ&dq=Christian+Hawkey&lr=
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=7SBON62u9ekC&pg=PA200&dq=Christian+Hawkey&lr=
- ^ Jason Schneiderman. "Reviews: Citizen Of by Christian Hawkey". Cold Front Magazine. http://reviews.coldfrontmag.com/2007/04/citizen_of_by_c.html.
External links
- "first-book interviews", Kate Greenstreet, kinking wind
- www.wavepoetry.com
- www.poetrybus.com
- www.berliner-kuenstlerprogramm.de
- www.kookbooks.de
- "Stars are shredding machines"; "From my mother's sleep"". PEN America 10: Fear Itself. http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/3386/prmID/1502.
Categories:- American poets
- University of Massachusetts Amherst alumni
- University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty
- Pratt Institute faculty
- 1969 births
- Living people
- Writers from Florida
- American poet stubs
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