Printed job bulletin to be eliminated

Kindergarten Profs: Math, science programs take ‘brains-on’ approach to partnerships with K-12 schools

A sampling of partnerships

Campus Conversation

University community abuzz after visit to the 21st century

Futurist says change will accelerate in 21st century

Hiemstra: Education to evolve with society

Commencement speaker is U.S. Poet Laureate

Whither the doctorate: UW project culminates in conference

Book highlights struggle world forgot as ‘Black Workers Remember’ visits labor veterans

Students make beautiful music at Harrah: UW group makes most of week at elementary school

Letter from the President

University faculty, staff give $1.1 million to state’s Combined Fund Drive

University to play host to three prominent speakers

Spring Home Fair blooms April 4 - 5

85 staff members nominated for Distinguished Staff Award

 

Commencement speaker is U.S. Poet Laureate

The University of Washington has selected Robert Pinsky, the 39th poet laureate of the United States, to be the commencement speaker in ceremonies to be held June 10 in Husky Stadium.

Pinsky, 60, is the only poet laureate ever to be appointed to three consecutive one-year terms. He was first appointed in 1997.

 
Robert Pinsky

Pinsky's main undertaking as poet laureate is the "Favorite Poem Project," in which he selects a broad cross section of Americans reading aloud their favorite poems, as part of the Library of Congress bicentennial. Pinsky will present 200 video and 1,000 audio tapes of the Favorite Poem readings to the Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature in April as one of the library's "birthday gifts to the nation."

Pinsky teaches in the graduate writing program at Boston University. In addition, he is poetry editor of the online journal Slate and a contributor to The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on PBS.

His book The Figured Wheel: New and Collected Poems 1965-1995 was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in poetry and also received the Lenore Marshall Award and the Ambassador Book Award of the English Speaking Union. History of My Heart, published in 1985, was chosen for the William Carlos Williams Prize of the Poetry Society of America. His collection of essays Poetry and the World was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle award in criticism.

His translation of The Inferno of Dante was awarded the Los Angeles Times Book Award in poetry and the Howard Morton Landon Prize for translation. It has been called "the premier modern text for English-language readers to experience Dante's power." His writing also has won awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters.

His latest collection of poems, Jersey Rain, will be published in April. He also is editing the Norton Anthology of Twentieth Century American Poetry.

Pinsky began his artistic career as a saxophone player but switched to poetry in college. Some critics have said that Pinsky uses language the way a jazz musician uses melody — inventing harmonies out of the disharmonious. Pinsky has described the responsibility of the artist as twofold — to continue the art, but also to change the terms of the art.

Pinsky received a bachelor's degree from Rutgers University, and master's and doctoral degrees from Stanford University, all in English.

Pinsky is visiting Seattle April 26 for two events sponsored by the King County Library System. He will conduct an informal question-and-answer session at

3 p.m. at the Redmond Regional Library, 15990 NE 85th St. At 7 p.m., at the Kirkland Performance Center, 350 Kirkland Ave., Pinsky will give a poetry reading, followed by questions and a book signing. For questions about these free events, call (206) 684-6650. ¶



University Week
The faculty and staff publication of the University of Washington
uweek@u.washington.edu
March 30, 2000