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Scott Cairns

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Name
  
Scott Cairns


Role
  
Poet

Scott Cairns wwwtweetspeakpoetrycomwpcontentuploads20140

Education
  
Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Books
  
Short Trip to the Edge, Compass of Affection, Love's Immensity, Recovered body, God With Us

year of the arts an evening with scott cairns biola university


Scott Cairns, PhD (né Scott Clifford Cairns; born 1954 Tacoma, Washington) is an American poet, memoirist, librettist, and essayist.

Contents

Scott cairns findingod


Formal education

Scott Cairns Scott Cairns Poetry Foundation

Cairns earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Western Washington University (1977), a Master of Arts degree from Hollins University (1979), a Master of Fine Arts degree from Bowling Green State University (1981), and a PhD from the University of Utah (1990).

Academic career

Scott Cairns Scott Cairns Seattle Pacific University

Cairns has served on the faculties of Kansas State University, Westminster College, University of North Texas, Old Dominion University. He currently is Curators' Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Missouri. While at North Texas, Cairns had served as editor of the American Literary Review. He now also directs Writing Workshops in Greece, an annual, 4-week workshop during the month of June, located on the island of Thasos. Since 2015, he has also served on the poetry faculty of the Seattle Pacific University low-residency MFA program in creative writing, and currently serves as that program's director.

Works

Scott Cairns Scott Cairns A Poets Dialogue on Vimeo

Cairns is the author of eight collections of poetry, one collection of translations of Christian mystics, one spiritual memoir, a book-length essay on suffering, and co-edited The Sacred Place with Scott Olsen, an anthology of poetry, fiction and nonfiction. It won the inaugural National Outdoor Book Award (Outdoor Literature category) in 1997. He wrote the libretto for "The Martyrdom of Saint Polycarp," an oratorio composed by JAC Redford, and the libretto for "A Melancholy Beauty," an oratorio composed by Georgi Andreev. Cairns's poems have appeared in journals including The Atlantic Monthly, The Paris Review, The New Republic, Image, and Poetry, and have been anthologized in Upholding Mystery (Oxford University Press, 1996), Best Spiritual Writing (Harper Collins, 1998 and 2000), and Best American Spiritual Writing (Houghton Mifflin, 2004, 2005, and 2006).

Family

He is married to Marcia Lane Vanderlip and they have two children, Benjamin V. Cairns and Elizabeth V. Cairns-Callen. He has a brother, Steve Cairns, who currently resides in Hong Kong, teaching at an International School.

Awards

  • 2006 Guggenheim Fellow
  • 2014 The Denise Levertov Award
  • Works

  • Another Road Home, Poetry (July/August 2009)
  • Eremite, Poetry (January 2009)
  • Idiot Psalms, Poetry (January 2009)
  • References

    Scott Cairns Wikipedia


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