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Films about Queer History

 

May Swenson (1913 - 1989)

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The Love Poems of May Swenson

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Made With Words (Poets on Poetry Series)Made With Words by May Swenson, Gardner McFall (Editor)

May Swenson (1913-1989) has long been a personal favorite of mine. Much of her work is difficult to find, or out of print. Gardner McFall, a poet herself,has done a wonderful job of editing the prose, reviews, introductions and the correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop(1913-1979) and May Swenson, although there is much to be found in the St. Louis's, Washington University Archives, where the bulk of May's papers are housed,this is a generous selection.

I am hoping that the McFall book will set May's publishers to consider a "Complete Works" of the wonderful May Swenson. McFall, however, is to be applauded for her rounding up and editing of these important prose selections. The book, part of the prestigious "Poets on Poetry"series from the University of Michigan Press, is a gift to both fans and scholars alike. -- Anonymous Review

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Nature: Poems Old and NewNature: Poems Old and New by May Swenson, Susan Mitchell

Nature, a major compendium of May Swenson's poems, including ten that appeared first in this collection, draws on nearly fifty years of work. "Surely no one, scientist or poet," wrote former U.S. poet laureate Howard Nemerov, "has seen things . . . so clearly as she, and surely no one has made seeing and saying so nearly one."

The first major gathering of May Swenson's poems in a decade, this posthumous collection concentrates on her nature poems. Drawn from nearly fifty years of her work, Nature contains 182 poems, many never before published. With Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore, May Swenson ranks among the foremost poets of this century. All who love nature and poetry will relish this work.

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May Swenson : A Poet's Life in PhotosMay Swenson : A Poet's Life in Photos by R. Rozanne Knudson, Suzzanne Bigelow (Contributor), Richard Wilbur (Introduction)

May Swenson was born in Utah in 1913 to a Mormon family. She eventually moved to New York to become a poet and a woman who loved women. She published more than a dozen books, received awards from the MacArthur and Guggenheim foundations and the National Endowment for the Arts, and during her lifetime was one of America's most highly regarded poets. For this book, R. R. "Zan" Knudson excerpted family journals, photo albums, letters, and previously unpublished poems to describe the life of the poet who was her partner of 23 years. This discreet volume respects Swenson's Mormon roots and Utah State University Press, which published the book, by refraining from referring to any of the women Swenson lived with as her "lovers." Lesbian readers, however, will recognize Swenson as a foremother. -- Amazon.com

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The May Swenson Poetry Award

Utah State University Press

This annual competition, named for May Swenson, honors her as one of America's most provocative, insouciant, and vital poets. In John Hollander's words, she was "one of our few unquestionably major poets."  During her long career, May was loved and praised by writers from virtually every major school of poetry. She left a legacy of nearly fifty years of writing when she died in 1989. She is buried in Logan, Utah, her hometown.

 

May Swenson

Excerpt:

May Swenson once said that her experience of poetry is "based in a craving to get through the curtains of things as they appear, to things as they are, and then into the larger, wilder space of things as they are becoming." The poet's task became, for her, a lifelong quest for a means of interpreting "the vastness of the unknown beyond [one's] consciousness." We hope the following poems reacquaint our readers with the range and depth of her imagery, the energetic optimism of her vision, and the tactile strength of her images...

 This page hosts several poems.

  

May Swenson

From poets.org

Excerpt:

May Swenson was born in Logan, Utah, in 1919. She attended Utah State University, Logan, and received a bachelor's degree in 1939. She taught poetry at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California at Riverside, Purdue University and Utah State University and was an editor at New Directions publishers from 1959 to 1966...

  

Blue

By May Swenson

From Nature: Poems Old and New  by May Swenson, published by Houghton Mifflin Company. Copyright © 1994 the Literary Estate of May Swenson.

    

May Swenson Papers

Washington University's May Swenson Papers contain manuscript and editorial material toward most of her books including Another Animal (1954), A Cage of Spines (1958), To Mix with Time: New and Selected Poems (1963), and Half Sun Half Sleep (1967). This material includes drafts of individual poems as well as letters to and from various editors, friends, and readers. Swenson's correspondents include John Hall Wheelock, and Burroughs Mitchell, but the most fascinating portion of May Swenson's Papers is her correspondence with the American poet Elizabeth Bishop. The two were close friends and Washington University holds 268 of their letters written from 1950 to 1979, the year of Bishop's death.

  

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