Paul Kane (poet)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Kane
Paul Kane in 2016
Born (1950-03-23) March 23, 1950 (age 74)
Alma materYale University
Occupations

Paul Kane (born March 23, 1950) is an American poet, critic and scholar. Awards for his work include Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Bogliasco Foundation, a Fulbright Award, and an honorary doctorate from La Trobe University in Australia.[1][2][3] He is also considered an Australian poet.[4] Kane teaches at Vassar College and lives in Warwick, New York.[5]

Life[edit]

Kane was born in a small village in upstate New York and has lived most of his life in the country. Residing in Warwick, NY, since 1974, he also spends time each year in rural Australia, where he built himself a house as a retreat.[6] He finished high school at The Hill School in Pottstown, PA, where he met visiting poet W. H. Auden, and afterwards spent a year at St. Peter's School in York, England, on an English-Speaking Union Fellowship. He subsequently attended Yale University, where he was active in the student movement.[6] After college, he began studying at the Chardavogne Barn, under the tutelage of W. A. Nyland. He spent a decade working various jobs, including teaching, carpentry, landscaping, rug repair and bookselling. Kane received a Fulbright award to the University of Melbourne in 1984 to write a study of Australian poetry. He then spent a year as the Schweitzer Prize Preceptor in Poetics at New York University before returning to Yale in 1986, where he completed a doctorate.[7] Since 1990, he has worked as a professor at Vassar College.

Career[edit]

As an undergraduate at Yale (1969–73) Kane worked with poets Mark Strand, Richard Howard, and Jean Valentine and studied literature with Cleanth Brooks and Harold Bloom. He also met Robert Penn Warren, Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsburg (who visited during the student strike in 1970).[6] After college Kane began publishing poems in journals, including Poetry, The New American Review, The Paris Review, The New Republic, The Kenyon Review and Grand Street. After the Fulbright year in Australia, where he befriended poets Vincent Buckley, Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Gwen Harwood, Kevin Hart, Philip Hodgins and Les Murray, he worked with John Hollander, Harold Bloom and Geoffrey Hartman at the Yale Graduate School.[5] He taught briefly at Yale before going on to Vassar College. During that time, his first book of poems was published by George Braziller in New York, The Farther Shore (1989), which Nobel Laureate Joseph Brodsky described as "a dark echo of Robert Frost."[8]


Commute

Always in those trips by car
there was a sense of wishing for what
was not yet: morning's appointments,
a quick lunch, conversations
in the afternoon, the ride back.
And when the sun rose and the speeding
air glittered, the talk again turned
to older travels, other travails.
And always it seemed we had passed that point
before, and the landscapes converged
to a simple prospect, a single wish:
that everything recurring for us might end,
the coming and going over the same ground,
that we might split the cost of turning
forward to begin again—payment
in exchange for all we may have changed.

from The Farther Shore[9]

In 1994, Kane co-edited the Library of America edition of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Collected Poems and Translations, and brought out the following year, Poetry of the American Renaissance: A Diverse Anthology from the Romantic Period (1995, rev. 2012). This was followed by his ground-breaking Australian Poetry: Romanticism and Negativity (1996), hailed as "magnificent"[10] and praised for its "theoretical reach and elegance."[11]

Kane's second book of poems, Drowned Lands (2000), continued the personal and historical themes explored in his earlier collection. Harold Bloom praised Kane for adding to "the Virgilian elegance of The Farther Shore a quality of quizzical wisdom."[12] Kane's next major collection, Work Life (2007), extended his range (John Koethe thought it "imbued with the magic of the matter-of-fact") and touched on the collective trauma of 9/11, as in the poem "The Knowing".

The Knowing

There came a day when to hear an airplane,
whether hard-edged drone or high whine,
gave one pause. We never were innocent,
only incurious within our managed lives,
worshipping household gods, lending unawares
our good name to a curse in others' mouths.
What has befallen us befell the world
a long time ago--long before we forgot
the club, the knife, the whip were ours too,
that the land absorbed blood as readily as rain.
Look at the garden and the order of these flowers:
circle within circle, like a dance or
a beautiful song that catches the breath.
It is mid-afternoon in late summer,
the sky's high dome of blue almost infinite.
Layers of sound separate out, each
a different register: the wind in the trees,
the cicadas in the grass, the birds calling
and twittering, and the wind chime ringing
pure notes, improvising a melody.
The eyes behold and are held by color--
the red barn, blue door, all the shades of green
and the riot of the garden. Even
the long shadows are clarifying.
Set this world on fire, you will know its worth.

from Work Life

In 2011, a collection of his poems was translated into Chinese as The Scholar's Rock, and, in 2013, Kane collaborated with the Irish sound artist Katie O'Looney to make Seven Catastrophes in Four Movements (Farpoint Recordings).[13]

As a scholar of American literature, Kane writes primarily on the work of the Transcendentalists, particularly Ralph Waldo Emerson, but he also focuses on contemporary poetry and criticism.[5] His interest in environmental literature can be seen in his Rothko Chapel talk, published as "Inner Landscapes as Sacred Landscapes" in The Kenyon Review (2003).[14]

Kane's involvement with Australian literature has grown steadily over the years. A founding member of the American Association of Australasian Literary Studies in 1986, and President from 1991-96, he has been Poetry Editor of its journal Antipodes since its inception.[15] In 1995 he attended the inaugural Mildura Writers Festival in Australia and subsequently became Artistic Director.[16] In 2012, as General Editor, he initiated The Braziller Series of Australian Poets to introduce contemporary Australian poets to American readers.[10] Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee, writing in The New York Review of Books, called Kane's Australian Poetry "the best study we have of poetry in Australia."[17] In 2013, Kane received an honorary degree from La Trobe University for his contribution to Australia's cultural life.[18]

Kane is included in a volume of interviews of writers and intellectuals by Cassandra Atherton, In So Many Words (2013), which also features Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Camille Paglia and Harold Bloom.[19]

Reviews[edit]

"Kane's big third collection presents poems as well crafted as any these days, as well as a wonderfully appealing persona. His poetic voice is modest, reporting ruminatively rather than solipsistically within the flow of personal experience. There's no missing his intelligence—or his cultivation. 'Psyche,' the long poem at this book's center, attests to his strengths rather magnificently....Perhaps Coleridge, were he with us now, would write such a poem."[20]

"The special paradox of Kane's achievement is to have crafted a form of address as deceptively open as Walt Whitman's, while being as edgy and as spiritually cryptic as Emily Dickinson."[21]

"There are so many influences and traditions underpinning this work, yet it speaks to a reader with simplicity and clarity, so that one comes not merely to enjoy, but to value its irony and its philosophical refinement."[22]

Bibliography[edit]

Poetry[edit]

Collections
  • 1989 The Farther Shore. George Braziller
  • 2000 Drowned Lands. University of South Carolina Press
  • 2006 Psyche: A Poem. Warwick Publications
  • 2007 Work Life: New Poems. Turtle Point Press
  • 2008 A Slant of Light. Whitmore Press (Australia)
  • 2011 The Scholar's Rock, trans. Shaoyang & Renlan Zhang. Otherland (Australia)
  • 2014 Hafiz: Twelve Ghazals, illus. Tina Kane. Warwick Publications
  • 2016 Welcome Light. Audubon Terrace Press
  • 2017 Renga: 100 Poems, with John Kinsella. GloriaSMH Press (Australia)
  • 2018 A Passing Bell: Ghazals for Tina. White Crane Press (Australia)
List of poems
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected
Before dawn at Maryborough 1996 Kane, Paul (January–February 1996). "Before dawn at Maryborough". Quadrant. 40 (1–2): 20.

Non-fiction[edit]

  • 1994 Ralph Waldo Emerson: Collected Poems & Translations. Harold Bloom & Paul Kane, eds., The Library of America
  • 1996 Australian Poetry: Romanticism and Negativity. Cambridge UP
  • 1996 Ralph Waldo Emerson: Essays and Poems. Harold Bloom & Paul Kane, eds., Library of America
  • 2004 Vintage. Donata Carrazza & Paul Kane, eds., Hardie Grant Books
  • 2005 Letters to Les. Donata Carrazza & Paul Kane, eds. Sunnyland Press
  • 2012 Poetry of the American Renaissance. George Braziller

Collaborations[edit]

  • 1994 Tears For Columbia, music by Chet Kane, Glitterhouse Records
  • 2007 Work Life: New Poems. Turtle Point Press
  • 2012 Mont St. Michel and Shiprock, photographs by William Clift, Peramain Press
  • 2013 Seven Catastrophes in Four Movements, music by Katie O'Looney. Farpoint Recordings

Awards and honors[edit]

Over the course of his career, Paul Kane has won a variety of awards for poetry and teaching. While he was a student at Yale, he won the university's McLaughlin English Prize in 1970, and in 1973, he was appointed Class Poet. In 1984, he won a Fulbright Post-Graduate Grant, and in 1985, the Schweitzer Prize Preceptorship in Poetics from New York University. The following year, he was awarded Yale University's university fellowship. In 1987, he received a Literature Board Project Grant from the Australia Council, and in 1990, he was elected to PEN America. In 1989, Kane was an Expert-in-Residence at Hamilton College in Australia and a Guest Fellow at Ezra Stiles college at his alma mater, Yale University. In 1998, he was awarded both an NEH Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities and a Guggenheim Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. In 2000, Paul Kane was a visiting scholar at Monash University in Australia.[10] In 2007, he was awarded the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal for Service in Mildura, Australia. In 2012, he received an Initiative Grant Literature Board of the Australia Council for the Arts and was an artist-in-residence at The Guesthouse Arts Collective in Cork, Ireland.[23] In 2012, Kane was also appointed as Poet Laureate of Orange County, New York.[24] In 2013, The Liguria Study Center in Bogliasco, Italy awarded Kane with its Bogliasco Fellowship.[25] In 2013, Paul Kane was awarded an Honorary Doctorate (honoris causa) from La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "PEN American Center-Paul Kane". 22 July 2011. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. ^ "Paul Kane | Directory of Writers | Poets & Writers". Pw.org. 7 August 2014. Archived from the original on 22 May 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Australian college honors Paul Kane". The Chronicle. Warwick, New York. 23 August 2013. Archived from the original on 9 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Paul Hetherington Reviews The Turnrow Anthology of Contemporary Australian Poetry | Cordite Poetry Review". Cordite.org.au. 1 November 2014. Archived from the original on 19 February 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  5. ^ a b c "Paul Kane - English Department - Vassar College". English.vassar.edu. 21 April 2008. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  6. ^ a b c Paul Kane. "Paul Kane - Tapa Notebooks - nzepc". Nzepc.auckland.ac.nz. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  7. ^ "Kane, Paul 1950- - Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series". Encyclopedia.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  8. ^ Joseph Brodsky in Paul Kane, The Farther Shore (NY: George Braziller, 1989), back jacket.
  9. ^ "The Farther Shore — George Braziller". Georgebraziller.com. Archived from the original on 30 January 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  10. ^ a b c "Ali Alizadeh Interviews Paul Kane". Cordite Poetry Review. 1 February 2013. Archived from the original on 27 January 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  11. ^ "Modelling Australian Poetry | Negative Capability". Michellecahill.com. 4 February 2013. Archived from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  12. ^ Harold Bloom in Paul Kane, Drowned Lands (Columbia: Univ. of South Carolina Press, 2000), back cover.
  13. ^ "KANE / O LOONEY | 7 CATASTROPHES..." Farpointrecordings.com. Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  14. ^ "Editor's Notes & Cover Art | Journal". Kenyonreview.org. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  15. ^ "Orange Bureau Confidential: Warwick's Paul Kane new poet laureate - News - recordonline.com - Middletown, NY". recordonline.com. 10 June 2012. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  16. ^ 'A Short History of the Mildura Writers' Festival," Vintage: Celebrating Ten Years of the Mildura Writers' Festival, eds. Donata Carrazza and Paul Kane (Melbourne: Hardie Grant, 2004): vii.
  17. ^ Birns, Nicholas (13 September 2011). "Reading Across The Pacific: J. M. Coetzee on Les Murray". Antipodesjournal.blogspot.com.au. Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  18. ^ Brookes, Andrew (22 July 2013). "Kane able to secure honour". Sunraysia Daily. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  19. ^ "Australian Scholarly Publishing". Scholarly.info. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  20. ^ Paul Kane (2007). Work Life: New Poems. Turtle Point. ISBN 9781933527079.
  21. ^ Hill, Barry (3 November 2007). "Epiphanies of a quiet American". News.com.au. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  22. ^ "The physics of light: Michelle Cahill reviews Paul Kane's poetics | Mascara Literary Review". Mascarareview.com. 1 January 2011. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  23. ^ "Residents 2012". The Guesthouse Project. Archived from the original on 9 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  24. ^ "Orange Bureau Confidential: Warwick's Paul Kane New Poet Laureate". Times Herald-Record. 10 June 2012. Archived from the original on 10 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  25. ^ "Lewis Spratlan (BF '13) and Paul Kane (BF '13) - Pew Commission collaboration". Bogliasco Foundation. Archived from the original on 10 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.

External links[edit]