Anselm Berrigan
Anselm Berrigan (born 1972 in Chicago, Illinois) is a poet and teacher.[1]
Life and Work
Anselm Berrigan grew up in New York City, where he currently resides with his wife, poet Karen Weiser [2] From 2003 to 2007, he served as artistic director at the St. Mark's Poetry Project. He is the brother of poet and musician Edmund Berrigan, half-brother of Kate Berrigan and scientist David Berrigan, son of poets Alice Notley and the late Ted Berrigan, and stepson of the late English poet and prose writer Douglas Oliver. He has also lived in Buffalo, NY at the "Ranch" and was known lovingly as "Anton" in San Francisco, CA. He is a co-chair of the writing program at the Bard College summer MFA program and a professor at Wesleyan University. He has also taught writing at Brooklyn College, Rutgers University, Pratt Institute, and the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa. His newest works are a book-length poem called Notes From Irrelevance (2011), Sure Shot (2013), and Loading (2013), which was done in collaboration with artist Jonathan Allen.
Selected bibliography
- They Beat Me Over the Head With a Sack, a chapbook published in 1998.
- Integrity & Dramatic Life. , a full-length collection published by Edge Books in 1999.
- Zero Star Hotel, a full-length collection published by Edge Books in 2002.
- "Pictures for Private Devotion", a CD (reading poems/no music/ narrow house), released in 2003.
- Some Notes on My Programming, a full-length collection published in 2006.
- Have a Good One, a chapbook published in 2008.
- To Hell With Sleep, a perfect-bound chapbook published in 2009.
- Free Cell published by City Lights in 2009. ISBN 978-0-87286-502-0.
- Notes From Irrelevance (Wave Books, 2011)
- Sure Shot by Overpass Books in 2013.
- LOADING with Jonathan E. Allen by Brooklyn Arts Press in 2013. ISBN 978-1-936767-28-1.
External links
Citations
- Robert Creeley et al., eds. (2002). The Best American Poetry 2002. Scribner Poetry. ISBN 0-7432-0386-0.
- Lyn Hejinian et al., eds. (2004). The Best American Poetry 2004. Scribner Poetry. ISBN 0-7432-5737-5.
References
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