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Paul Muldoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Muldoon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Muldoon (born June 20, 1951) is a writer, academic and educator, as well as Pulitzer Prize-winning poet from County Armagh, Northern Ireland.

Contents

[edit] Life and work

Muldoon's poetry is known for difficulty, allusion, casual use of extremely obscure or archaic words, understated wit, punning, and deft technique in meter and slant rhyme.[citation needed]

Muldoon has lived in the United States since 1987; he teaches at Princeton University and is an Honorary Professor in the School of English at the University of St Andrews. He held the chair of Professor of Poetry at Oxford University for the five-year term 1999–2004, and he is an Honorary Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford University.

Until recently, Muldoon was often thought of as the second-most-eminent living poet in Northern Ireland, in the shadow of Seamus Heaney[citation needed], but Muldoon's reputation has grown dramatically since he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize in poetry.

Honours include fellowships in the Royal Society of Literature and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the 1994 T. S. Eliot Prize, the 1997 Irish Times Poetry Prize, and the 2003 Griffin International Prize for Excellence in Poetry.

In September 2007, he was hired as poetry editor of The New Yorker.

Muldoon has contributed the librettos for four operas by Daron Hagen: Shining Brow (1992), Vera of Las Vegas (1996), Bandanna (1998), and The Antient Concert (2005). His interests have not only included libretto, but the rock lyric as well, penning lines for the Handsome Family as well as the late Warren Zevon whose titular track "My Ride's Here" belongs to a Muldoon collaboration. Muldoon also writes lyrics for (and plays "rudimentary rhythm" guitar in) his own Princeton-based rock band, Rackett.

[edit] Family

Paul Muldoon is married to the writer Jean Hanff Korelitz. He has two children - Dorothy and Asher - and lives in Griggstown, New Jersey.[1]

[edit] Publications

By 2006, Muldoon's published books (with major collections starred*) were:

Most of these volumes were collections of shorter poems. Often a single and considerably longer poem is placed at the end of a volume. Muldoon's most recent collections have, however, included more than one long poem.

Madoc: A Mystery, among Muldoon's most difficult works, is a book-length poem, which some consider Muldoon's masterpiece. It narrates in fractured sections an alternate history in which Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey come to America in order to found a utopian community. (The poets had, in reality, discussed but never undertaken this journey; the title comes from Southey's poem Madoc, about a legendary Welsh prince of that name.)

Muldoon has also edited a number of anthologies, written two children's books, translated the work of other authors, and published critical prose. These are, respectively:

  • The Scrake of Dawn: Poems by Young People from Northern Ireland (1979)
  • The Faber Book of Contemporary Irish Poetry (1986)
  • The Faber Book of Beasts (1997)
  • The Oxford and Cambridge May Anthologies 2000: Poetry (2000)
  • The Best American Poetry 2005 (with David Lehman) (2005)
  • The Last Thesaurus (1996)
  • The Noctuary of Narcissus Batt (1997)
  • The Astrakhan Cloak (translated into English the work written by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill in Irish language) (1992)
  • The Birds / adaptation after Aristophanes (1999)
  • The End of the Poem: 'All Souls Night' by WB Yeats (lecture) (2000)
  • To Ireland, I (2000)
  • The End of the Poem: Oxford Lectures in Poetry (2006)

[edit] Awards

Muldoon has won the following major poetry awards:[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Making history in Griggstown", Princeton Packet, November 27, 2007. Accessed December 23, 2007. "Two presentations by John Allen, president of the Griggstown Historical Society, were made. Mark Alan Hewitt, project architect, received an autographed copy of “Moy Sand & Gravel” by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Paul Muldoon, a Griggstown resident."
  2. ^ From Paul Muldoon at www.contemporarywriters.com

[edit] External links

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