
| Carl Phillips |
| Media Assistance:
Susan Killenberg McGinn Exec. Dir. of Danforth Campus Communications smcginn@wustl.edu (314) 935-5254 |
![]() |
| Carl Phillips |
|
|
| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
|
Showing 3 Stories. |
| March 25 program kicks off humanities series Carl Phillips and the 'Art of Restlessness' (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/11226.html) March 6, 2008 -- Distinguished poet Carl Phillips, professor of English and of African and African American Studies, both in Arts & Sciences at Washington University, will deliver the first of three talks on poetry at 4 p.m. Tuesday, March 25, in Umrath Lounge on the Danforth Campus, as part of the Interdisciplinary Project in the Humanities (IPH) in Arts & Sciences and WUSTL's Assembly Series. Based on the theme of "The Art of Restlessness: On Poetry and Making," Phillips' talks are free and open to the public. The March 25th program will focus on "Poetry and Resistance." |
|||
| Nominated for 'The Rest of Love: Poems' Poet Carl Phillips is finalist for National Book Award (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/4156.html) Oct. 27, 2004 --
|
|||
| Top honors Four elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/876.html) May 17, 2004 -- Carl Frieden, Jeffrey I. Gordon, John F. McDonnell and Carl Phillips can now stand proudly beside Ben Franklin, George Washington, Albert Einstein and Winston Churchill. Those four from Washington University in St. Louis have joined those four from history as being elected into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. |
|
Showing 3 Stories. |
While teaching high school students Greek and Latin for eight years, Phillips found himself constantly writing on the side.
"I think of the whole process of writing as a gesture of inquiry," he said, "and there are always questions to be asked. I keep returning, it seems, to issues I've previously explored, in part because we change; we get older; our relationship to the world changes. The rest of it — prizes, awards, attention — by the time those things happen, if they do, the reason for putting a given poem down on the page has already come and gone, and I've moved on to the next thing."
Before his publishing career began, he received two prestigious awards — the George Starbuck Fellowship, which is given to the Boston University graduate student considered "the best writer" in the creative writing program, and a $10,000 Massachusetts Artist Foundation award for 10 pages of poems he submitted.
Phillips earned a bachelor's degree, magna cum laude, in Greek and Latin in 1981 from Harvard University, a master's degree in Latin and classical humanities in 1983 from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and a master's degree in creative writing in 1993 from Boston University.
He arrived at Washington University in 1993 for a joint appointment in the Department of English and the African and Afro-American Studies Program, both in Arts & Sciences. He directed the university's Creative Writing Program from 1996-98 and 2000-02.
Phillips has accumulated an impressive list of literary accomplishments, including being one of two poets selected by U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky in 1997 for a Witter Bynner Foundation Fellowship. In 1995, "Cortege" — only his second book — was nominated for both the National Book Critics Circle Award, considered one of the most prestigious honors in literature, and the Lambda Literary Award in Poetry.
In his poetry, Phillips writes of dreams and desires, relationships and redemption. His work has been described as inventive and homoerotic, infused with a classical richness.
Robert Pinsky called Phillips "a tremendously gifted poet" with the "unmistakable voice and subject, rhythm and cadence of an original writer."
|
Related Information Related Links:
Related Groups: |
|