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Carolyn Forché
Known
as a “poet of witness,” Carolyn Forché is the author of four books of
poetry. Her first poetry collection,
Gathering The
Tribes (Yale University Press, 1976),
won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award from the Yale University
Press. In 1977, she traveled to Spain to translate the work of
Salvadoran—exiled poet Claribel Alegría, and upon her return, received a
John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, which enabled her to travel
to El Salvador, where she worked as a human rights advocate.
Her
second book,
The Country Between
Us (Harper and Row, 1982), received the Poetry Society of America's
Alice Fay di Castagnola Award, and was also the Lamont Selection of the
Academy of
American Poets.
Her translation of Alegria's work,
Flowers From The Volcano, was published by the University Pittsburgh
Press in 1983, and that same year, Writers and Readers Cooperative (New
York and
London)
published
El Salvador: Work of
Thirty Photographers, for which she wrote the text. In 1991, The
Ecco Press published her translations of
The Selected Poetry of Robert
Desnos (with William Kulik). Her articles and reviews have appeared
in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Nation, Esquire, Mother
Jones, and others. Forché has held three fellowships from The National
Endowment for the Arts, and in 1992 received a Lannan Foundation
Literary Fellowship.
Forché’s anthology,
Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of Witness, was published by
W.W. Norton & Co. in 1993, and in 1994, her third book of poetry,
The Angel of History
(HarperCollins, Publishers), was chosen for The Los Angeles Times Book
Award. In 1998 in
Stockholm,
she was given the Edita and Ira Morris Hiroshima Foundation for Peace
and Culture Award, in recognition of her work on behalf of human rights
and the preservation of memory and culture. In April of 2000, Curbstone
Press published a new book of her translations of Claribel Alegría,
Sorrow. Her fourth book of poems,
Blue Hour, was published by
HarperCollins in Spring, 2003. The book she co-translated,
Selected Poetry of Mahmoud Darwish, was published by the
University of California Press in Fall, 2002. A chapbook selection of that work was published by The
Lannan Foundation Fall, 2001.
Carolyn Forché teaches at Skidmore
College in Saratoga Springs, New York, and also lives in Maryland with her husband, photographer Harry Mattison, and their son,
Sean-Christophe.
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