Creative Conversations: Award-Winning Poet Vahni Capildeo

Creative Conversations: Award-Winning Poet Vahni Capildeo

Creative Writing: Creative Conversations
Date: Monday 04 December 2017
Time: 13:00 - 14:00
Venue: University Chapel
Category:
Speaker: Martha McCorkindale
Website: www.gla.ac.uk/subjects/creativewriting/

As part of the on-going Creative Conversation speaker series, poet Vahni Capildeo comes to campus to discuss her writing. Bring your lunch and burning questions!

Vahni Capildeo is an award-winning poet born in Trinidad and living in the UK. Her poetry collections include No Traveller Returns (2003), Undraining Sea (2009), Dark and Unaccustomed Words (2012), Utter (2013), and Measures of Expatriation (2016), which won the 2016 Forward Prize. Selecting Measures of Expatriation for the Forward Prize, the judging panel chair Malika Booker stated, “We found a vertiginous excitement in the way in which the book grasps its subject: the sense of never quite being at home. This is poetry that transforms. When people in the future seek to know what it’s like to live between places, traditions, habits and cultures, they will read this. Here is the language for what expatriation feels like.” In an interview with the Forward Arts Foundation, Capildeo discusses the sources for Measures of Expatriation’s “sense of coexistent distance-in-presence, presence-in-distance, which is so typical of virtual communication today but also of how travellers carry elsewhen as well as elsewhere in their heart.”

Capildeo collaborated with writer and theater artist Jeremy Hardingham on a Shakespeare-engaged performance, a process she describes as “part of an ongoing project relating text to movement in new ways.” She has also collaborated with poet, artist, and journalist Andre Bagoo. Capildeo has served as a contributing editor for the Caribbean Review of Books and as an editorial assistant and a researcher for the Oxford English Dictionary.

Books by featured authors will be for sale in John Smiths bookshop.

This series is sponsored by the Ferguson Bequest and programmed by Creative Writing at University of Glasgow.

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