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Arthur Sze

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File:Gloria Graham Arthur Sze.jpg
Arthur Sze, photo by Gloria Graham during the video taping of Add-Verse, 2004

Arthur Sze (b. 1950 New York City) is a second-generation Chinese American poet.

Sze was educated at the University of California, Berkeley, and is the author of eight books of poetry. His own poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Conjunctions, The Kenyon Review, Manoa, The Paris Review, Field, The New Yorker, and Virginia Quarterly Review,[1] and have been translated into Albanian, Chinese, Dutch, Italian, Romanian, and Turkish.

He was a Visiting Hurst Professor at Washington University, a Doenges Visiting Artist at Mary Baldwin College, and has conducted residencies at Brown University, Bard College, and Naropa University. He is a professor emeritus at the Institute of American Indian Arts and is the first poet laureate of Santa Fe.

Arthur Sze took part in the Poetry International Festival Rotterdam 2007.[2]

Awards

He is the recipient of a Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Writers’ Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship,[3] an American Book Award, a Lannan Literary Award for Poetry,[4] two National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing fellowships, a George A. and Eliza Gardner Howard Foundation Fellowship, three grants from the Witter Bynner Foundation for Poetry, and a Western States Book Award for Translation.

Work

  • "Looking back on the Muckleshoot Reservation from Galisteo Street, Santa Fe". poets.org.
  • "Slanting Light". poets.org.
  • "Spring Snow". poets.org.
  • "The Shapes of Leaves". poets.org.
  • "Before Completion". The Poetry Foundation.
  • "Looking Back on the Muckleshoot Reservation from Galisteo Street, Santa Fe". The New Yorker. May 26, 2008.
  • "Aqueous Gold". Boston Review. February/March 2004. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

Books

  • The Willow Wind, Rainbow Zenith Press (Berkeley, CA), 1972,
  • The Willow Wind: Poems and Translations from the Chinese, Tooth of Time Books (Santa Fe, NM), revised edition 1981.
  • Two Ravens, Tooth of Time Books (Guadalupita, NM), 1976,
  • Two Ravens: Poems and Translations from the Chinese, revised edition 1984.
  • Dazzled, Floating Island Publications (Point Reyes, CA), 1982.
  • River River, Lost Roads Publishers (Providence, RI), 1987.
  • Archipelago, (Copper Canyon Press, 1995) (Port Townsend, WA).
  • The Redshifting Web: Poems 1970-1998, (Copper Canyon Press, 1998).
  • Quipu (Copper Canyon Press, 2005).
  • The Ginkgo Light (Copper Canyon Press, 2009).
  • Chinese Writers on Writing. Ed. Arthur Sze. (Trinity University Press, 2010).

Translations

Anthologies

  • Articulations: The Body and Illness in Poetry, edited by Jon Mukand, University of Iowa Press (Iowa City, IA), 1994
  • Premonitions: The Kaya Anthology of New Asian North American Poetry, edited by Walter Lew, Kaya Production (New York City), 1995
  • I Feel a Little Jumpy around You, edited by Naomi Shihab Nye and Paul Janeczko, Simon & Schuster (New York City), 1996
  • What Book!?: Buddhist Poems from Beats to Hiphop, edited by Gary Gach, Parallax Press (Berkeley, CA), 1998.

Reviews

About his work, the poet Jackson Mac Low has said:,

The word 'compassion' is much overused—'clarity' less so—but Arthur Sze is truly a poet of clarity and compassion.

Albuquerque Journal reviewer John Tritica:

resides somewhere in the intersection of Taoist contemplation, Zen rock gardens and postmodern experimentation.

These poems are complex in thought and perception; in language, however, they have the cool clarity of porcelain. The surface is calm, while the depths are resonant. There is about these poems a sense of inevitability, as though they could not possibly be other than what they are. They move precisely through their patterns like a dancer, guided by the discipline that controls and inspires. [5]

References