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Poet

Rita Dove

Rita Dove

Rita Dove

(United States of America, 1952)
Biography

Born in Akron, Ohio, Rita Dove was the daughter of one of the first African-American chemists allowed to work in the tire industry. In 1980, she debuted with The Yellow House on the Corner, a collection that immediately won her great acclaim. Many collections followed, including Thomas and Beulah, a novel in verse that would win her the Pulitzer Prize for poetry the next year. From 1993 until 1995, Dove was the American Poet Laureate. Aside from poetry, she has also written essays, short stories, a play, and a novel. Her work has earned her countless awards and titles, including the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize (2021) and the Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry (2022) as well as 29 honorary doctorates. In 2021 she published the poetry collection Playlist for the Apocalypse (W.W. Norton). 

From the start, Dove’s poetry has stood out due to its powerful engagement with the emancipation of the African-American community. Poems like “Belinda’s Petition,” “The House Slave,” and “Rosa” can be read as fiery accusations against the ruthless treatment of Black America. And in Thomas and Beulah she described her grandparents’ desperate struggle to scratch out an existence in an Ohio town during the Great Migration. Her poems also tackle a great many other topics, of course, –motherhood, for one, and music and dance.
Dove’s poetry pairs a great clarity with an exceptionally effective use of imagery and a fine-tuned sense of form. Her poem “The House Slave,” for instance, communicates a sense of threat from its very first line. “The first horn lifts its arm over the dew-lit grass” she writes, and we immediately feel that physical violence is imminent. The loaded last line of the poem – “I weep. It is not yet daylight.” – seems to synopsize the entire painful emancipation process of Black America in just a few harrowing words. She also artfully plays with form, like in the poem “American Smooth,” in which she describes how she dances with her partner, apparently in the titular style, letting the poem itself light-footedly dance from one line to the next.
Pure class is what that is.


In 1989,1996 and 2019 Rita Dove has been a guest at the Poetry International festival in Rotterdam.

Read about Rita Dove on Poetry Foundation.

© Jabik Veenbaas

Poetry
The Yellow House on the Corner, Carnegie Mellon Press, Pittsburgh, 1980
Museum, Carnegie Mellon Press, Pittsburgh, 1983
Thomas and Beulah, Carnegie Mellon Press, Pittsburgh, 1986
Grace Notes, W.W. Norton, New York, 1989
Selected Poems, Pantheon/Vintage, New York, 1993
Mother Love, W.W. Norton, New York, 1995
On the Bus with Rosa Parks, W.W. Norton, New York, 1999
American Smooth, W.W.Norton, New York, 2004
Sonata Mulattica, W.W. Norton, New York, 2009
Collected Poems 1974-2004, W.W. Norton, New York/Londen, 2016
Playlist for the Apocalypse, W.W. Norton, 2021

Essays
The Poet’s World, The Library of Congress, Washongton DC, 1995.

Drama
The Darker Face of the Earth: A Verse Play in Fourteen Scenes, Story Line Press, Pasadena, 1994

Novel
Through the Ivory Gate, Pantheon Books, New York, 1992

Short fiction
Fifth Sunday, University of Kentucky, Lexington, 1985

Sponsors
Gemeente Rotterdam
Nederlands Letterenfonds
Stichting Van Beuningen Peterich-fonds
Ludo Pieters Gastschrijver Fonds
Lira fonds
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère