Dawn-Michelle Baude

Dawn-Michelle Baude
Born (1959-01-15) January 15, 1959
Southern Illinois, United States
Literary movement Postmodernism

Dawn-Michelle Baude (born January 15, 1959) is an American poet, journalist and educator.

Biography

Born in southern Illinois, Baude moved to San Diego, CA, in 1977 with her first husband Angelo Kolokithas (divorced 1979). Baude received her undergraduate degree from San Diego State University. While pursuing her graduate degree at New College of California, she was influenced by Robert Duncan and other Bay Area writers active in the 1980s. She received her MA from New College in 1986. She earned an MFA from Mills College shortly thereafter.

In the late 1980s, she moved to Athens, Greece, then to Paris, France, where she married Laurent Baude (divorced 2008). Influenced by the poets Alice Notley and Douglas Oliver, she published poetry[1] as well as art criticism.[2] She was a frequent contributor to various Condé Nast and Meredith publications, appearing with the bylines Dawn Kolokithas and Dawn-Michelle Baude, as well as under pseudonyms.

In the 1990s, she lived in Egypt, Lebanon and France. She gave birth to her son, Alexandre, in 1996—the same year she received her Diplôme d'études approfondies from the Sorbonne. She joined the faculty of Bard College's Lacoste School of the Arts program in southern France, during which time she met poet Gustaf Sobin, artist Curt Asker, composer Anders Hillborg, writer David Ambrose, filmmaker Peter Montagnon and other habitués of the Provence region.

She has taught at the Université de Paris, the American University of Beirut, Alexandria University (Egypt), John Cabot University (Rome, Italy), and the American University of Paris.[3] She earned her PhD in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2003. In 2007, after 18 years abroad, she returned to the US to make her home in the state of New York. In 2011, Baude moved to Las Vegas, Nevada, where she blogs for the Las Vegas Weekly, Huffington Post, and others.

Awards

Tucson Festival of Books, First Place in Nonfiction, 2016[4]

Noepe Center for Literary Arts, Residency Scholarship, 2016

Nevada Arts Council Artist Fellowship, Honorable Mention, 2016

Senior Fulbright Award, 2005–06

Works

Poetry

Poetry Translations

Editorial

Monographs and Essays

Communications

Nonfiction

Fiction

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.