Adrienne Rich (born May 16, 1929 in Baltimore, Maryland) is an American feminist, poet, teacher, and writer.
In 1951, Rich graduated from Radcliffe College, and also won the prestigious Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition for her first book, A Change of World. W. H. Auden, the judge of the award, wrote a preface for the book that acquired eventual notoriety for its classic tones of male condescension and paternalism to female artists. In 1953, Rich married Alfred Conrad, a Harvard economist, and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she bore three sons in the next five years. Rich's third book Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law (1963), which was eight years in the writing, stands as a watershed in her poetic development. The critical reaction to Snapshots was negative, with objections to its bitter tone and the shift away from her hallmarks of formalism and emotional control.
Rich moved to New York in 1966, when her husband took a teaching position at City College. She taught in the SEEK program, a remedial English program for poor, black, and third world students entering college, which was raising highly political questions about the collision of cultural codes of expression and the relation of language to power, issues that have consistently been addressed in Rich's work. She was also strongly impressed during this time by the work of James Baldwin and Simone de Beauvoir. Though Rich and her husband were both involved in movements for social justice, it was to the women's movement that Rich gave her strongest allegiance. Leaflets (1969), The Will to Change (1971), and Diving into the Wreck (1973), which won the 1974 National Book Award, demonstrated a progressive coming to power as Rich contends against the desolation she believes patriarchy enacts on the literal and psychic landscape.
Rich refused the National Medal of Arts in 1997 saying, "I could not accept such an award from President Clinton or this White House because the very meaning of art, as I understand it, is incompatible with the cynical politics of this administration." Another quote from the same speech outlines her view of poetry: "* means nothing if it simply decorates the dinner table of the power which holds it hostage."
In February of 2003, Rich, along with other poets, in protest of the Iraq War, refused to attend a White House symposium on "Poetry and the American Voice."*
It was announced on March 18, 2005 that Rich had won the 2004 National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry for School Among the Ruins.
1929 births | Living people | American feminists | Bisexual writers | MacArthur Fellows | Feminist writers | American poets | Cornell University faculty | Alumnae of women's colleges | Lesbian writers
Adrienne Rich | Adrienne Rich | Adrienne Rich | Adrienne Rich
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