Louise Glück
Adjunct Professor of English
Rosencranz Writer in Residence
LC
415 | 432-6895
Office hours: T 9-12 & by appt.
On leave fall 2008
After attending Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, New York,
and Columbia University, New York City, Glück taught
poetry at numerous colleges and universities. Her first collection
of poetry, Firstborn (1968), uses a variety of first-person
personae, all disaffected or angry. The collection's tone
disturbed many critics, but Glück's exquisitely controlled
language and imaginative use of rhyme and metre delighted
others. Although its outlook is equally grim, her collection The House on Marshland (1975) shows a greater mastery
of voice. There, as in her later volumes, Glück's personae
include historic and mythic figures such as Gretel and Joan
of Arc. Her adoption of different perspectives became increasingly
imaginative; for example, in "The Sick Child," from
the collection Descending Figure (1980), her voice
is that of a mother in a museum painting looking out at the
bright gallery. The poems in The Triumph of Achilles (1985), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for
poetry, address archetypal subjects of classic myth, fairy
tales, and the Bible. These concerns are also evident in Ararat (1990), which has been acclaimed for searing honesty in its
examination of the family and the self. Later works by Glück
include The Wild Iris (1992), Meadowlands (1996),
and The First Five Books of Poems (1997); she was also
editor of The Best American Poetry 1993 (1993).
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UNDERGRADUATE COURSES: Introduction to Verse Writing, Advanced Verse Writing