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Yusef Komunyakaa

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Nationality
  
American

Parents
  
James William Brown

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Yusef Komunyakaa

Genre
  
Poetry


Yusef Komunyakaa Songs of Rage and Tenderness The Poetry of Yusef

Born
  
James William Brown April 29, 1941 (age 82) (according to U.S. Army discharge papers of 14 Dec. 1966 and other evidence as cited by his former wife Mandy Sayer, although passport supposedly says 1947) (
1941-04-29
)

Alma mater
  
Colorado State University

Notable awards
  
Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award; Pulitzer Prize for Poetry; Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize.

Spouse
  
Mandy Sayer (m. 1985–1995)

Education
  
Colorado State University, University of California, Irvine

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award

Books
  
Dien Cai Dau, Neon Vernacular: New and, The Chameleon Couch, Talking Dirty to the Gods, Warhorses

Similar People
  
Rita Dove, David Lehman, Philip Levine, Cornelius Eady, Mandy Sayer

Yusef komunyakaa 2011 national book festival


Yusef Komunyakaa (born April 29, 1941) is an American poet who teaches at New York University and is a member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers. Komunyakaa is a recipient of the 1994 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award, for Neon Vernacular and the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. He also received the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize. Komunyakaa received the 2007 Louisiana Writer Award for his enduring contribution to the poetry world.

Contents

Yusef Komunyakaa Yusef Komunyakaa Poetry Society of America

His subject matter ranges from the black general experience through rural Southern life before the Civil Rights era and his experience as a soldier during the Vietnam War.

Yusef Komunyakaa httpswwwpoetsorgsitesdefaultfilesstyles2

Life

Yusef Komunyakaa Yusef Komunyakaa The Poetry Foundation

According to public records, Komunyakaa was born in 1947 (though in her memoir his ex-wife claims he was born in 1941) and given the name James William Brown, the eldest of five children of James William Brown, a carpenter. He later reclaimed the name Komunyakaa that his grandfather, a stowaway in a ship from Trinidad, had lost. He grew up in the small town of Bogalusa, Louisiana, before and during the Civil Rights era.

He served in the US Army, serving one tour of duty in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, and according to his former wife Mandy Sayer he was discharged on 14 December 1966. He worked as a specialist for the military paper, Southern Cross, covering actions and stories, interviewing fellow soldiers, and publishing articles on Vietnamese history, which earned him a Bronze Star.

Yusef Komunyakaa Yusef Komunyakaa

He began writing poetry in 1973 at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, where he was an editor for and a contributor to the campus arts and literature publication, riverrun. He earned his M.A. on Writing from Colorado State University in 1978, and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of California, Irvine, in 1980.

Yusef Komunyakaa Yusef Komunyakaa Poetry Foundation

Komunyakaa married Australian novelist Mandy Sayer in 1985, and in the same year, became an associate professor at Indiana University in Bloomington. He also held the Ruth Lilly Professorship for two years from 1989 to 1990. He and Sayer were married for ten years. He later had a relationship with India-born poet Reetika Vazirani, which ended when she took her own life and that of their 2-year old child Jehan in 2003.

He taught at Indiana University until the fall of 1997, when he became an English professor at Princeton University. Yusef Komunyakaa is currently a professor in the Creative Writing Program at New York University.

Poetry

His collection Copacetic fuses jazz rhythms and syncopation with hip colloquialism and the unique, arresting poetic imagery that has since become his trademark. It also outlines an abiding desire in his work to articulate cultural truths that remain unspoken in daily discourse, in the hope that they will bring a sort of redemption: "How can love heal/ the mouth shut this way.../ Say something that resuscitates/ us, behind the masks."

He wrote I Apologize for the Eyes in My Head, published in 1986, which won the San Francisco Poetry Prize. More attention came with the publication of Dien Cai Dau (Vietnamese for "crazy in the head"), published in 1988, which focused on his experiences in Vietnam and won the Dark Room Poetry Prize. Included was the poem "Facing It", in which the speaker of the poems visits the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Section from "Facing It":

He's lost his right arm inside the stone. In the black mirror a woman's trying to erase names No, she's brushing a boy's hair."

Komunyakaa has published many other collections of poetry, including Taboo: The Wishbone Trilogy, Part I (2004), Pleasure Dome: New and Collected Poems, 1975-1999 (2001), Talking Dirty to the Gods (2000), Thieves of Paradise (1998), Neon Vernacular (1994), Magic City (1992) and "Pleasure Dome (2001).

After receiving his M.F.A., Komunyakaa began teaching poetry in the New Orleans public school system and creative writing at the University of New Orleans.

In 2004, Komunyakaa began a collaboration with dramaturge and theater producer Chad Gracia on a dramatic adaptation of The Epic of Gilgamesh. The play was published in October 2006 by Wesleyan University Press. In spring 2008, New York's 92nd Street Y staged a one-night performance by director Robert Scanlon. In May 2013 it received a full production by the Constellation Theatre Company in Washington, D.C.

Komunyakaa's work has been influential for a wide swath of current American poets. He views his own work as an indirectness, an "insinuation":

Poetry is a kind of distilled insinuation. It’s a way of expanding and talking around an idea or a question. Sometimes, more actually gets said through such a technique than a full frontal assault.

References

Yusef Komunyakaa Wikipedia