Encyclopedia > Elizabeth Bishop

  Article Content

Elizabeth Bishop

Elizabeth Bishop (February 8, 1911 - October 6, 1979), American poet and writer.

A protege of Marianne Moore, and a good friend of Robert Lowell[?], Elizabeth Bishop was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. After her father's death and her mother's institutionalization, Elizabeth Bishop lived with her Canadian grandparents in Nova Scotia for a few years, and later with her father's family in Boston. She attended two different boarding schools, and in 1934 graduated from Vassar College.

In 1956, Bishop won the Pulitzer Prize for her collection of poetry, North & South - A Cold Spring. For her poetry, Bishop was awarded the Houghton Mifflin poetry award in 1946, and later, the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the Neustadt Prize for Literature. Elizabeth Bishop also received two Guggenheim fellowships.

Elizabeth Bishop travelled widely during her lifetime, living in New York, Key West, and, for sixteen years, in Brazil with her companion Lota de Macedo Soares.

Bishop often contributed articles to the New Yorker, and in 1964, wrote the obitiuary for Flannery O'Connor in the New York Review of Books.

Bishop lectured in higher education for a number of years. For a short time she taught at the University of Washingtone, before moving to Harvard for seven years, after which she taught at New York University, before finishing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

After her death in 1979, Bishop's reputation grew beyond the small critical fame she'd developed during her lifetime.

Works

  • North & South (1956)
  • Questions of Travel (1965)
  • The Complete Poems (1969)
  • Geography III (1976)
  • The Diary of Helena Morley (translation) (1957)
  • "Three Stories by Clarice Lispector." (1964)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
French resistance

... after the Fall of France[?] in 1940. Later they cooperated with Allied secret services. French resistance could claim its origin a Charles de Gaulle�s Appeal of ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.2 ms