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- Message-ID: <9301230927.AA09373@casbah.acns.nwu.edu>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.literary
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 17:17:17 CST
- Sender: Discussions about Literature <LITERARY@UCF1VM.BITNET>
- From: "John Coryell." <jcoryell@NWU.EDU>
- Organization: MI
- Subject: Re: Poet Laureate
- Comments: To: literary@ucf1vm.bitnet
- In-Reply-To: <9301211732.AA13532@elwood.esu.edu>
- Lines: 35
-
- >> I seem to recall reading recently that we no longer have a Poet Laureate
- >> as the last one resigned. If that is true, I think that Maya Angelou would
- >> be an excellent choice.
- >>
- >> Mindy Fiala
- >> MFiala@vax1.umkc.edu
- >
- >Maya Angelou was named (U.S.) Poet Laureate last year by George Bush.
- >Like the British Poets Laureate, the US position has been graced by
- >persons of uneven talent. To be fair, it _is_ a lousy position; the
- >PL must produce works on demand for occasions not usually poetically (?)
- >inspiring.
- >
- >Does anyone recall the name of the British Poet Laureate? Last I heard,
- >it was a poet from the West Indies, a Derek ___(?)
- >
- >Richard Bugyi-Sutter
- >E Stroudsburg Univ, PA, USA.
-
- Mona Van Duyn, not Maya Angelou, is the Poet Laureate of the U.S.
- Prior to her, it was Mark Strand, who succeeded Howard Nemerov, a
- favorite of the Irish. The position is only five years old, having
- evolved from the Library of Congress Poetry Consultant; Mona Van
- Duyn is the first woman to be appointed.
-
- And the U.S. Poet Laureate does not have to compose on demand; the
- extent of the requirement is that he or she give a public speech,
- the LC equivalent of a University's honorary annual lecture. There
- is a grant which comes with it, and there's a guarantee of having
- the celebratory Selected Poems published or reprinted to accomodate
- the hordes of people who, obviously, rush out in peals of excitement
- upon hearing that there is a new PL to familiarize themselves
- thoroughly with the corpse of work.
-
- John Coryell.
-