Jim Powell (poet)
Jim Powell is an American poet, translator, and classicist from the San Francisco Bay Area.[1][2]
Career
Powell’s poetry of 1977-2007 is collected in It Was Fever That Made The World (1989) and Substrate (2009). He has translated the poetry of Sappho (1993, rev. 2007) and selections from other ancient Greek and Latin lyric poets, and published essays and reviews. Thom Gunn and Robert Duncan were teachers, mentors and friends; he was a member of Duncan’s Homer Group. He was poet-in-residence at Reed College (1988–90), a graduate student at University of California, Berkeley, a MacArthur Fellow (1993–98), and the Sherry Poet at the University of Chicago (2005).[3][4][5]
Publications
- Substrate (2009)
- The Poetry Of Sappho (2007)
- "To Sea Again, Dear Ship" (Common Knowledge 2007, 10 translations)
- Catullan Revenants (2001 chapbook)
- California Blue Indian Ghost Dance (2000 chapbook)
- A Victorian Connoisseur Of Sunsets (1999 chapbook)
- Sappho: A Garland (1993)
- It Was Fever That Made the World (1989)
- "Poetry Without Imposture" (Threepenny Review, 2008, on Thom Gunn)
- "Reading The Canon" (Kean Review 2007)
- "Poetry And Second Thoughts" (TriQuarterly 1993)
- "In The Waiting Room" (TriQuarterly 1991)
- "Basil Bunting and Mina Loy" (Chicago Review 1990)
- "William Everson (Brother Antoninus") (Beat Generation Writers, Dictionary of Literary Biography)
- "Rope Of Twined Lifetimes: The Poetry Of John Peck" (Occident 1980)
- "The Light Of Vers Libre" (Paideuma 1979, on Pound's metric)
References
External links
Persondata |
Name |
Powell, Jim |
Alternative names |
|
Short description |
|
Date of birth |
|
Place of birth |
|
Date of death |
|
Place of death |
|