Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright

Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright

photo by Franz Wright
Born October 3, 1966 (1966-10-03) (age 45)
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Occupation Translator
Nationality American
Genres Lyric poetry, non-fiction

Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright (* born Elizabeth (Ann) Oehlkers on October 3, 1966 in Baltimore) is an American translator.

Contents

Biography

Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright translates texts of contemporary German authors, especially Lyric poetry, into English language. In 1996 she got a MFA for literary translation at the University of Arkansas. From September 1994 till July 1995 during an academic year in Berlin she had been translating, amongst others, the German-Turkish poets Zafer Şenocak and Zehra Çırak. After that she worked as a lecturer in Arkansas, and gave seminars at the Boston University and at the Oberlin College. Together with Zafer Şenocak she had bilingual readings in Memphis, New York City, Cambridge, San Francisco und Los Angeles.[1] She received several awards and research fellowships like NEA[2] and ALTA. Her translations appear in Agni,[3] Slope,[1] Seneca Review, Another Chicago Magazine and in the online magazine Perihelion.[4]

In 1999 Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright married Franz Wright, poet and Pulitzer Prize winner of 2004.[5] They live in Waltham, Massachusetts. Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright works at a medical translation agency in Boston.

Translations

External links

References

  1. ^ a b :: slope issue 11-12 ::
  2. ^ „‚Elizabeth's about the best translator of free verse I've worked with‘, said John DuVal, UA professor of translation. ‚When I consider Elizabeth and her talent for translating, I see her taking Zafer Şenocak, say, and tactfully nudging his words into just the English that best reflects his zany German. Şenocak is full of wit, but his ideas can be difficult to understand, imprecise. Elizabeth's translations bring out the humor of his poetry and communicate his ideas while preserving that indirect style.‘“ In: „The Good Word – Three UA Poets Win Prestigious NEA Fellowships“. Source: Arkansas. The Magazine of the Arkansas Alumni Association Inc., Spring 2003, Vol. 52, No. 3
  3. ^ translations of some German poets
  4. ^ Aviya Kushner: „Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright: The Web and Translation“, Poets & Writers, Nov/Dec 2002, Vol. 30, Issue 6, page 55
  5. ^ David Mehegan: Out of the darkness. After battling alcoholism and mental illness, poet Franz Wright has stepped into the light, Boston Globe, May 18, 2004
  6. ^ most of the poems from Fernwehanstalten and some from other books
  7. ^ Valzhyna Mort, Poet
  8. ^ The PIP (Project for Innovative Poetry) Anthology of World Poetry of the 20th Century | Volume 7: At Villa Aurora: Nine Contemporary Poets Writing in German | Green Integer Books