Mississippi’s Poet Laureate Catherine Pierce to give online talk on how ‘poetry is for everyone’
Contact: John Burrow
STARKVILLE, Miss.—Catherine Pierce, Mississippi’s Poet Laureate and a professor in Ƶ’s Department of English, will lead a live Facebook event Tuesday [Aug. 24], giving a public reading and discussing her prestigious statewide appointment.
Hosted by the MSU College of Arts and Sciences’ Institute for the Humanities, the 4 p.m. free event will be streamed on the Institute for the Humanities Facebook page, available at .
Pierce, who serves as co-director of the English department’s creative writing program, was appointed as Mississippi’s Poet Laureate this spring by Gov. Tate Reeves.
“Many of Dr. Pierce’s poems resonate with where we are right now.She writes about dangers lurking in the background, the uneasiness we feel about uncertain times, the confusion created by fake news and ‘alternative facts,’” said Julia Osman, director of the Institute for the Humanities and an associate professor of history.
Osman said Pierce’s work delves into complex subjects through an art form some find “distant.”
“Dr. Pierce is going to show us, however, that poetry is for everyone, and how we all can benefit from reading or even writing it,” Osman said. “Right now, poetry seems to be ‘in season.’ It seems to help us grapple with the uncertainties of our current moment. I’m hoping Dr. Pierce can help bring this kind of poetry to more people and help us have deeper and more meaningful interactions with poems and words.”
Pierce is the recipient of the 2021 Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters Poetry Award for her book “Danger Days,” (Saturnalia 2020), a collection of poems addressing the beauty of the world, as well as destruction created by climate change.
Pierce also is an awardee of the 2020 Mississippi Arts Commission Literary Artist Fellowship for her poetry, a 2020 Pushcart Prize for the poem “Entreaty,” and a 2018 Pushcart Prize for the poem “I Kept Getting Books about Birds.” A native of Delaware, Pierce is a 2019 Creative Writing Fellowship honoree through the National Endowment for the Arts.
Pierce’s 2019 poem “How Becoming a Mother Is Like Space Travel” was published in The Nation magazine, considered the oldest continuously printed weekly magazine in the U.S.
Pierce is the author of three additional books of poetry. They include “The Tornado Is the World” (Saturnalia 2016), winner of the 2017 Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters Poetry Award and a 2015 national Sustainable Arts Foundation Award; “The Girls of Peculiar” (Saturnalia 2012), winner of the 2013 Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters Poetry Award; and “Famous Last Words” (Saturnalia 2008), winner of the Saturnalia Books Poetry Prize.
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