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Claudia Rankine
Jamaican-American poet, essayist, and playwright (born 1963)
Jamaican-American poet, essayist, and playwright (born 1963)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Claudia Rankine |
| image | Author Photo of Claudia Rankine.jpg |
| caption | Rankine in 2016 |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Kingston, Jamaica |
| occupation | Professor |
| nationality | American |
| alma_mater | Williams College (BA) |
| Columbia University (MFA) | |
| genre | Poetry; Playwright |
| spouse | John Lucas |
| awards | MacArthur Fellow |
| website |
Columbia University (MFA)
Claudia Rankine (; born September 4, 1963) is a Jamaican-American poet, essayist, playwright, and the editor of several anthologies. She is the author of five volumes of poetry, two plays and various essays.
Her book of poetry, Citizen: An American Lyric, won the 2014 Los Angeles Times Book Award, in Poetry (the first book in the award's history to be nominated in both poetry and criticism), the 2015 Forward Prize for Best Collection, the 2015 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award in Poetry, the 2015 NAACP Image Award in poetry, the 2015 PEN Open Book Award, the 2015 PEN American Center USA Literary Award, the 2015 PEN Oakland-Josephine Miles Literary Award, and the 2015 VIDA Literary Award. Citizen was also a finalist for the 2014 National Book Award and the 2015 T. S. Eliot Prize. It is the only poetry book to be a New York Times bestseller in the nonfiction category.
Rankine's numerous awards and honors include the 2014 Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the 2014 Jackson Poetry Prize, and the 2014 Lannan Foundation Literary Award. In 2005, she was awarded the Academy Fellowship for distinguished poetic achievement by the Academy of American Poets. In 2013, she was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. She is a 2016 United States Artist Zell Fellow and a 2016 MacArthur Fellow. In 2020, she was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Rankine has taught at Pomona College and was the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University. In 2021, she joined the New York University Creative Writing Program as a Professor.
Life and work
Claudia Rankine was born in Kingston, Jamaica, and later immigrated to the United States during childhood. After growing up in New York City, she was educated at Williams College and Columbia University.
In 2003, Rankine started work as an associate professor at the University of Georgia.
She taught English at Pomona College from 2006 to 2015.
Her work has appeared in many journals, including Harper's, GRANTA, the Kenyon Review, and the Lana Turner Journal, and she is a contributor to New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby. Rankine co-edits (with Juliana Spahr) the anthology series American Women Poets in the 21st Century: Where Lyric Meets Language.
Winner of an Academy of American Poets fellowship, Rankine's work Don't Let Me Be Lonely (2004), an experimental project, has been acclaimed for its unique blend of poetry, essay, lyric and television imagery. Of this volume, poet Robert Creeley wrote: "Claudia Rankine here manages an extraordinary melding of means to effect the most articulate and moving testament to the bleak times we live in I've yet seen. It's master work in every sense, and altogether her own."
Rankine's play The Provenance of Beauty: A South Bronx Travelogue, commissioned by The Foundry Theatre, was a 2011 Distinguished Development Project Selection in the American Voices New Play Institute at Arena Stage.

In 2014, Graywolf Press published her book of poetry Citizen: An American Lyric. Kamran Javadizadeh dissects this novel, particularly Rankine's allusion to Robert Lowell's Life Studies. He writes that Citizen takes a new angle on and recognizes Lowell's whiteness, a subject of interest for Rankine.
For so long you thought the ambition of racist language was to denigrate and erase you as a person. After considering Butler's remarks you begin to understand yourself as rendered hyper-visible in the face of such language acts. Language that feels hurtful is intended to exploit all the ways that you are present. Your alertness, your openness, your desire to engage actually demand your presence, your looking up, your talking back as insane as it is, saying please."
Rankine also works on documentary multimedia pieces with her husband, photographer and filmmaker John Lucas. These video essays are titled Situations.
Of her work, poet Mark Doty wrote: "Claudia Rankine's formally inventive poems investigate many kinds of boundaries: the unsettled territory between poetry and prose, between the word and the visual image, between what it's like to be a subject and the ways we're defined from outside by skin color, economics, and global corporate culture. This fearless poet extends American poetry in invigorating new directions."
In 2022, Rankine's play Help: A New Play debuted at The Shed in New York City, directed by Taibi Magar. Following this commission, Rankine joined The Shed's Board of Directors.
In a 2023 review in The Guardian of her 2001 collection Plot, critic Kate Kellaway wrote: "It is a bracing, discomfiting and complicated read partly because it breaks a taboo. It is often oppressively assumed that women will necessarily rejoice at pregnancy but this work involves a complicated dredging of doubt, an examination of the visceral and cerebral burden of pregnancy, a deliberate losing of the 'plot' (the word encompassing several meanings)."
Rankine additionally founded and curates the Racial Imaginary Institute, which she called "a moving collaboration with other collectives, spaces, artists, and organizations towards art exhibitions, readings, dialogues, lectures, performances, and screenings that engage the subject of race."
In 2017, Rankine collaborated with choreographer and performer Will Rawls to generate the work What Remains. Collaborators included Tara Aisha Willis, Jessica Pretty, Leslie Cuyjet, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste. The work premiered at Bard College, and has been performed at national venues, including Danspace in New York, the Walker Art Center, Yale Repertory Theatre, and Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art Warehouse Space. In an interview with Rawls, Rankine described how text and language were manipulated in the performance: "As a writer, you spend a lot of time trying to get all of these words to communicate a feeling or to communicate an action, and to be able to get rid of the words but still hold the feeling was stunning to me."
The Racial Imaginary Institute
The Racial Imaginary Institute (TRII) is an interdisciplinary collective established in 2017 by Rankine using funds from her 2016 MacArthur Grant. TRII is a think tank for artists and writers who study whiteness and examine race as a construct. Its mission is to convene "a cultural laboratory in which the racial imaginaries of our time and place are engaged, read, countered, contextualized and demystified."
Rankine envisions the organization as occupying a physical space in Manhattan; until that is possible, the institute is roving. In 2017, the Whitney Museum presented "Perspectives on Race and Representation: An Evening With the Racial Imaginary Institute" to address the debate sparked by Dana Schutz’s painting Open Casket. In the summer of 2018, TRII presented "On Whiteness," an exhibition, symposium, library, residencies, and performances, at The Kitchen in New York.
Awards and honors
- 1994: Cleveland State Poetry Prize for Nothing in Nature is Private.
- 2005: Academy Fellowship from the Academy of American Poets for distinguished poetic achievement
- 2014: National Book Critics Circle Award (Poetry) winner for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2014: National Book Critics Circle Award (Criticism) finalist for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2014: California Book Awards Poetry Finalist for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2014: Jackson Poetry Prize (awarded by Poets & Writers)
- 2015: PEN Open Book Award for Citizen
- 2015: PEN Center USA Poetry Award: for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2015: New York Times Bestseller for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2015: Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Poetry for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2015: NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work in Poetry for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2015: Forward Prize for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2016: MacArthur Fellowship.
- 2016 United States Artist Zell Fellowship.
- 2016: Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry for Citizen: An American Lyric
- 2017: Colgate University, Honorary Doctor of Letters, May 21, 2017.
- 2017: John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship for poetry
- 2020: Elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- 2021: Elected a Royal Society of Literature International Writer
Selected publications
References
References
- (June 22, 2015). "The Condition of Black Life Is One of Mourning". The New York Times.
- the 2015 [[National Book Critics Circle Award]][http://bookcritics.org/blog/archive/national-book-critics-circle-announces-award-winners-for-publishing-ye "National Book Critics Circle Announces Award Winners for Publishing Year 2014"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , ''Critical Mass'', March 12, 2015.)
- [https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/claudia-rankine "Claudia Rankine] {{Webarchive. link. (September 26, 2017 "Poets.org")
- "Claudia Rankine {{!}} English".
- "Claudia Rankine".
- (29 April 2016). "Claudia Rankine Reads Poetry, Discusses Racism at Garrison". [[The Student Life]].
- "First Lee Professor Appointed". [[Pomona College]].
- Salandy-Brown, Marina. (April 13, 2019). "Of Africa and of India".
- [http://www.pomona.edu/magazine/pcmfl06/DElivesofmind2.shtml ''Pomona College Magazine'' online] {{webarchive. link. (May 12, 2008 : news release.)
- (September 17, 2009). "Have You Ever Visited The Broncks?".
- (September 18, 2009). "Productions: The Provenance of Beauty".
- "The Bollingen Prize for Poetry 2011 Winner". Beinecke.library.yale.edu.
- [[Dan Chiasson]], [http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/27/color-codes "Colour Codes"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , ''The New Yorker'', October 27, 2014.)
- (2022). "Claudia Rankine and Robert Lowell, again". Explicator.
- [http://aalbc.com/authors/step_into_a_world.htm ''Step into a World: A Global Anthology of the New Black Literature''] {{Webarchive. link. (May 22, 2016 page at African American Literature Book Club site.)
- [http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/claudia-rankine Claudia Rankine] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 at poets.org.)
- "Queue-it".
- "Queue-it".
- (April 11, 2023). "Plot by Claudia Rankine review – the lives of mothers". The Observer.
- Rankine, Claudia. (2001-02-12). "Claudia Rankine".
- Studio, Familiar. (2019-04-02). "Tara Aisha Willis, Leslie Cuyjet, Jess Pretty, and".
- (March 8, 2019). "Claudia Rankine and Will Rawls Interview, 2018".
- Charlton, Lauretta. (January 19, 2017). "Claudia Rankine's Home for the Racial Imaginary".
- Cornum, Lou. (July 23, 2018). "How Whiteness Works: The Racial Imaginary Institute at the Kitchen".
- (March 21, 2017). "New World Disorder: Claudia Rankine". [[Artforum]].
- Greenberger, Alex. (March 30, 2017). "Whitney Museum to Partner with Claudia Rankine's Racial Imaginary Institute for Discussion About Dana Schutz Controversy". [[ARTnews]].
- "The Racial Imaginary Institute".
- Thrasher, Steven W.. (2016-10-19). "Claudia Rankine: why I'm spending $625,000 to study whiteness". [[The Guardian]].
- "Perspectives on Race and Representation: An Evening With the Racial Imaginary Institute".
- Wong, Ryan. (2018-07-24). "How to Talk About Whiteness".
- Landesberg, Paige. (2018-09-26). "To Watch and Be Watched".
- "The Kitchen: On Whiteness: Exhibition".
- (January 19, 2015). "National Book Critics Circle Announces Finalists for Publishing Year 2014". [[National Book Critics Circle]].
- Alexandra Alter. (March 12, 2015). "'Lila' Honored as Top Fiction by National Book Critics Circle". [[The New York Times]].
- "84th Annual California Book Awards Winners". Commonwealth Club.
- [https://www.pw.org/files/videos/rankine_jackson_prize_pr.pdf "Claudia Rankine Wins $50,000 Jackson Poetry Prize"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , Poets & Writers, April 21, 2014.)
- (May 8, 2015). "2015 PEN Literary Award Winners". PEN.
- Carolyn Kellogg, [http://www.latimes.com/books/jacketcopy/la-et-jc-pen-literary-award-winners-20150910-story.html?dlvrit=717819 "Claudia Rankine and Meghan Daum lead 2015 PEN Literary Awards"], ''Los Angeles Times'', September 10, 2015.
- (January 18, 2015). "Best Sellers". The New York Times.
- Carolyn Kellogg. (April 18, 2015). "The winners of the Los Angeles Times Book Prizes are ...".
- (February 10, 2015). "Winners of the '46th NAACP Image Awards'". NAACP.
- [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-34389370 "Claudia Rankine's 'exhilarating' poetry wins Forward prize"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , BBC News, September 29, 2015.)
- Tristram Fane Saunders (September 30, 2015), [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/claudia-rankine-wins-forward-prize-with-book-of-prose-poems/ "Claudia Rankine wins £10,000 Forward prize with book of prose poems"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , ''[[Daily Telegraph). The Telegraph]]''.
- (March 28, 2017). "Claudia Rankine Wins Bobbitt Poetry Prize". The New York Times.
- Daniel DeVries (February 28, 2017), [http://news.colgate.edu/2017/02/poet-claudia-rankine-to-deliver-2017-commencement-keynote.html/ "Poet Claudia Rankine to deliver 2017 commencement keynote"] {{Webarchive. link. (February 15, 2021 , Colgate University News.)
- "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation {{!}} Claudia Rankine".
- "AmAcad".
- (November 30, 2021). "Inaugural RSL International Writers Announced".
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