Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Rosmarie Waldrop

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Rosmarie Waldrop


Role
  
Poet

Rosmarie Waldrop epcbuffaloeduauthorswaldroprimagewaldropeva

Education
  
University of Wurzburg, University of Michigan

Books
  
The Reproduction of Profiles, Curves to the Apple, Reluctant gravities, Lavish absence, Love - like pronouns

Similar People
  
Keith Waldrop, Ernst Jandl, H C Artmann

The poet s voice charles bernstein peter waterhouse rosmarie waldrop woodberry poetry room


Rosmarie Waldrop (born August 24, 1935), née Sebald, is a contemporary American poet, translator and publisher. Born in Germany, she has lived in the United States since 1958. She has lived in Providence, Rhode Island since the late 1960s. Waldrop is coeditor and publisher of Burning Deck Press, as well as the author or coauthor (as of 2006) of 17 books of poetry, two novels, and three books of criticism.

Contents

Rosmarie Waldrop Rosmarie Waldrop Poet Academy of American Poets

Rosmarie waldrop poetry reading


Early life in Germany

Rosmarie Waldrop Gap Gardening by Rosmarie Waldrop The New Yorker

Waldrop was born in Kitzingen am Main on August 24, 1935. Her father, Joseph Sebald, taught physical education at the town's high school. Towards the end of the Second World War, she joined a travelling theatre, but returned to school after in early 1946. At school, she studied piano and flute and played in a youth orchestra. At Christmas 1954, the orchestra gave a concert for American soldiers stationed at Kitzingen. Afterwards, one of the audience, Keith Waldrop invited members of the orchestra to listen to his records. He and Rosmarie became friendly and worked together over the next few months, translating German poetry into English.

University years

Rosmarie Waldrop Rosmarie Waldrop

That same year, she entered the University of Würzburg, where she studied literature, art history and musicology. In 1955, she transferred to the University of Freiburg, where she discovered the writings of Robert Musil and participated in a protest against a lecture given by Heidegger. She then moved to the University of Aix-Marseille, where Keith spent 1956–57 on his GI Bill. At the end of the year, he returned to the University of Michigan. In 1958, he won a Major Hopwood Prize. He sent most of the money to Rosmarie to pay for her passage to the United States.

In the United States

The couple married, and Rosmarie started studying at Michigan, where she got a Ph.D. in 1966. She also became extremely active in literary, musical and artistic circles around the university and the wider Ann Arbor community. She began serious translation of French and German poetry. In 1961, the Waldrops bought a secondhand printing press and started Burning Deck Magazine. This was the beginning of Burning Deck, which was to become one of the most influential small press publishers of innovative poetry in the United States. As such, she is sometimes closely associated with the Language School.

Poetry and translations

Rosmarie Waldrop started publishing her own poetry in English in the late 1960s. Since then, she has published over three dozen books of poetry, prose and translation. Today her work is variously characterized as verse experiment, philosophical statement and personal narrative. Of the many formative influences on her mature style, a crucial influence was a year spent in Paris in the early 1970s, where she came into contact with leading avant garde French poets, including Claude Royet-Journoud, Anne-Marie Albiach, and Edmond Jabès. These writers influenced her own work, but equally, she became one of the main translators of their work into English and Burning Deck one of the main vehicles for introducing their work to an English-language readership.

Awards and achievements

Rosmarie Waldrop has given readings and published in many parts of Europe as well as the U.S. She has received numerous awards and fellowships and was made a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government. In 2003 she was awarded a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2006. She received the 2008 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation for her translation of Ulf Stolterfoht's book Lingos I - IX. Her translation of Almost 1 Book / Almost 1 Life by Elfriede Czurda was nominated for the Best Translated Book Award (2013).

Poetry

  • The Aggressive Ways of the Casual Stranger, NY: Random House, 1972
  • The Road Is Everywhere or Stop This Body, Columbia, MO: Open Places, 1978
  • When They Have Senses, Providence: Burning Deck, 1980
  • Nothing Has Changed, Windsor, VT: Awede Press, 1981
  • Differences for Four Hands, Philadelphia: Singing Horse, 1984; repr. Providence: Paradigm Press, 1999
  • Streets Enough to Welcome Snow, Barrytown, NY: Station Hill, 1986
  • The Reproduction of Profiles, NY: New Directions, 1987
  • Shorter American Memory, Providence: Paradigm Press, 1988
  • Peculiar Motions, Berkeley, CA: Kelsey Street Press, 1990
  • Lawn of Excluded Middle, NY: Tender Buttons, 1993
  • A Key Into the Language of America, NY: New Directions, 1994
  • Another Language: Selected Poems, Jersey City: Talisman House, 1997
  • Split Infinites, Philadelphia: Singing Horse Press, 1998
  • Reluctant Gravities, NY: New Directions, 1999
  • (with Keith Waldrop) Well Well Reality, Sausalito, CA: The Post-Apollo Press, 1998
  • Love, Like Pronouns, Omnidawn Publishing, 2003
  • Blindsight, New York: New Directions, 2004
  • Splitting Image, Zasterle, 2006
  • Curves to the Apple, New Directions, 2006
  • Driven to Abstraction, New Directions, 2010
  • Fiction

  • The Hanky of Pippin's Daughter, Barrytown, NY: Station Hill, 1986
  • A Form/ of Taking/ It All, Barrytown, NY: Station Hill, 1990
  • Essays and criticism

  • Against Language?, The Hague: Mouton/Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1971
  • The Ground Is the Only Figure: Notebook Spring 1996, Providence: The Impercipient Lecture
  • Series,Vol.1, No.3 (April 1997)

  • Lavish Absence: Recalling and Rereading Edmond Jabès, Wesleyan University Press, 2002
  • Dissonance (if you are interested), University Alabama Press, 2005
  • Translations

  • The Book of Questions by Edmond Jabès, 7 vols. bound as 4, Wesleyan UP, 1976, 1977, 1983, 1984
  • From a Reader's Notebook, by Alain Veinstein, Annex Press, Ithaca New York, 1983
  • Paul Celan: Collected Prose, by Paul Celan, Manchester & NY: Carcanet & Sheep Meadow, 1986
  • The Book of Dialogue by Edmond Jabès, Wesleyan UP, 1987
  • Late Additions: Poems by Emmanuel Hocquard (with Connell McGrath), Peterborough, Cambs.: Spectacular Diseases, 1988
  • The Book of Shares by Edmond Jabès, Chicago UP, 1989
  • Some Thing Black by Jacques Roubaud, Elmwood Park, IL: Dalkey Archive, 1990
  • The Book of Resemblances by Edmond Jabès, 3 vols., Wesleyan UP, 1990, 91, 92
  • From the Book to the Book by Edmond Jabès, Wesleyan UP, 1991
  • The Book of Margins by Edmond Jabès, Chicago UP, 1993
  • A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Book by Edmond Jabès, Wesleyan UP, 1993
  • Heiligenanstalt by Friederike Mayröcker, Providence: Burning Deck, 1994
  • The Plurality of Worlds of Lewis by Jacques Roubaud, Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1995
  • Mountains in Berlin: Selected Poems by Elke Erb, Providence: Burning Deck, 1995
  • The Little Book of Unsuspected Subversion by Edmond Jabès, Stanford UP, 1996
  • With Each Clouded Peak by Friederike Mayröcker (with Harriett Watts), Los Angeles, CA: Sun & Moon Press, 1998
  • A Test of Solitude by Emmanuel Hocquard, Providence: Burning Deck, 2000
  • (with Harry Mathews and Christopher Middleton) Many Glove Compartments by Oskar Pastior, Providence: Burning Deck, 2001
  • Desire for a Beginning Dread of One Single End by Edmond Jabès (Images & Design by Ed Epping), New York, New York : Granary Books, 2001
  • The Form of a City Changes Faster, Alas, Than the Human Heart by Jacques Roubaud, Dalkey Archive Press; Translation edition, 2006 ISBN 1-56478-383-9
  • References

    Rosmarie Waldrop Wikipedia