Posts Tagged ‘Teresa Carson’

Poetry Fridays: 2010 Festival Poet Teresa Carson

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Rebecca Gambale, Festival Assistant

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Teresa Carson’s Elegy for the Floater is an example of how poetry can help an individual to process and connect with a difficult past, while transforming the painful experiences into eloquent words on the page. This tension between pain and beauty is where poetry is made, and Carson wants to look you in the eye and show you that. She wants to remind you that after pain, art is possible.

In the book’s opening poems, the reader is quickly aware of Carson’s brother’s suicide, and through this hardship, Carson creates an intimacy with her audience. She speaks to the reader as her confidante, admitting “Listen even closer. I have to whisper this part: / his death was a relief.” We are given glimpses of her difficult childhood, born one child out of ten; we are privy to the rape which she kept a secret for so many years of her life.

Carson is dabbling in alchemy through her poems: they make the unflinchingly real undoubtedly poetic. She rallies against silence by taking the formative and often harrowing experiences of her past and turning them into brave and unabashed retellings, digging up the very real stuff that some would repress. There is never any doubt that the poet is the speaker in Elegy for the Floater.  Throughout the book, the complex feelings of these experiences take shape, and all the while there is never a sense of hopelessness or a cry for pity. There is a great humanness to which anyone can relate as she brings the reader into her most private stories.

It is no surprise that Carson’s work would translate seamlessly to realistic scenes on stage – Carson is a master of creating a connection between art and reality in her work. She is a graduate of the Sarah Lawrence MFA program, where she completed in both Poetry and Theatre. She has since adapted her second book, The Congress of Human Oddities, into a play. She has taken pain and, through her talent for drama and the well-crafted word, created art.

Raised in Jersey City, Carson has lived all of her life in Hudson County, New Jersey. She currently teaches at the College of New Rochelle. She worked in non-traditional-for-women technical jobs for a local phone company until retiring in 2003. She began her MFA shortly thereafter. Her book, Elegy for the Floater, is a part of CavanKerry’s LaurelBooks, a group of poetry and prose collections which confront serious psychological and/or physical illness. The titles in the series are part of a program where authors, physicians and psychologists hold panel discussions on the medical issues in the texts in order to raise awareness.

Please use the “Share your thoughts with us” box below to share other resources you may have found for this poet. In this way, we can build together a mini-wiki-encyclopedia on the 2010 Festival Poets.

Return in the weeks ahead as we continue to profile the 2010 Festival Poets

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The Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival in Newark is October 7 – 10
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Poetry Fridays: The 2010 Festival Poets

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Martin Farawell, Program Director, Poetry

Starting next week and continuing into October, we’ll be using the Poetry Fridays blog to introduce the poets participating in the 2010 Dodge Poetry Festival.  Each post will feature brief profiles of one or more poets, with links to poems, videos, interviews, podcast, bios and anything else of interest we might find in our research.

More importantly, we invite you to join in the process of building these profiles by using the Comments section of each blog to link us to items of interest you might discover about these poets.  Teachers, especially those bringing students to the Festival, can make such contributions part of a research assignment.  In this way, together we can build our own mini-wiki-encyclopedia on the 2010 Festival Poets.

The late Stanley Kunitz once commented on the Festival’s great democratic spirit.  He was referring, in part, to its long tradition of having an amazingly broad, deep and diverse line-up.  The 2010 Festival continues that tradition.  So far, the poets who have agreed to participate include:

Amiri Baraka
Michael Dickman Dunya Mikhail
Hadara Bar-Nadav Rita Dove Joseph Millar
Marjorie Barnes Martín Espada Malena Mörling
Tara Betts Santee Frazier Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Jericho Brown Rigoberto González Sharon Olds
Teresa Carson Kathy Graber Marie Ponsot
Michael Cirelli Penny Harter Claudia Rankine
Billy Collins Bob Hicok Kay Ryan
Kyle Dargan Tyehimba Jess Margo Taft Stever
Kwame Dawes Galway Kinnell Mark Strand
Oliver de la Paz Dorianne Laux Jerry Williams
Matthew Dickman Laura McCullough


Be sure to follow us in the weeks ahead as new names are added to this list, and to meet the 2010 Festival Poets.

You can always view video clips of readings from past Dodge Poetry Festivals on our YouTube channel.