Published in 2015 (first published 1998)
100 pages
Claudia Rankine is an American poet and playwright born in 1963 and raised in Kingston, Jamaica and New York City.
Rankine is the author of five collections of poetry, including “Citizen: An American Lyric” and “Don’t Let Me Be Lonely”; two plays including “The White Card,” which premiered in February 2018 (ArtsEmerson and American Repertory Theater) and will be published with Graywolf Press in 2019, and “Provenance of Beauty: A South Bronx Travelogue”; as well as numerous video collaborations. She is also the editor of several anthologies including “The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of the Mind.” In 2016, she cofounded The Racial Imaginary Institute. Among her numerous awards and honors, Rankine is the recipient of the Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry and the Poets & Writers’ Jackson Poetry Prize as well as fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, United States Artists and the National Endowment of the Arts. She is a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets and teaches at Yale University as the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut.
What is this book about?
Born in Jamaica and now making her home in the United States, Claudia Rankine writes poems that draw breath from alienation — from her home, her body, her mind. Hailed by Robert Hass as “a fiercely gifted young poet,” Claudia Rankine has welded the cerebral and the spiritual, the sensual and the grotesque. With a fierce intelligence and daunting honesty, Rankine writes about her vulnerability by looking at those closest to her. Whether writing about the man she fell in love with, or the country she’s come to that is not her home, what remains long after, in searing echo, is her voice — its beguiling cadence and vivid physicality.