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Eleni Sikelianos
Eleni Sikelianos
Born1965 (age 58–59)
California
Alma materNaropa University
Occupation(s)Poet and Writer, Professor
SpouseLaird Hunt
RelativesAngelos Sikelianos (great-grandfather)

Eva Palmer-Sikelianos (great-grandmother)

Anne Waldman (Aunt)

Eleni Sikelianos (born 1965) is an American experimental poet with a particular interest in scientific idiom. She is Professor of Literary Arts at Brown University.

Early life

Sikelianos is the great-granddaughter of the Greek poet Angelos Sikelianos, a former candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature, and Eva Palmer-Sikelianos. She was raised in California. A high school dropout, she grew up on food stamps in California with a single mom, and graduated from the Naropa Institute with an MFA in Writing & Poetics.[citation needed]

Career

Sikelianos works as Professor of Literary Arts at Brown University. She was poet-in-residence at two homeless shelters in San Francisco in the early-to-mid 1990s and then taught at Teachers & Writers Collaborative in New York City and literature and Bard College's Clemente Program.[citation needed] She co-ran the Wednesday Night Readings at the St. Mark's Poetry Project in St. Mark's Church. She has also taught at Naropa, and the University of Denver,[1] where Eryn Green, Carolina Ebeid and Jennifer Elise Foerster have been her students, among many others.[2]

Her work has appeared in Grand Street, Rattapallax,[3] Sulfur, Chicago Review, and Fence. In an interview she gave with the California Journal of Poetics, Sikelianos discusses how zoology, cell biology, and marine biology became important to her early poetic sensibility. She cites Lynn Margulis’ work in evolutionary symbiosis and the work of D’Arcy Wentworth Thomas as influential."[4]

Personal life

She currently lives in Rhode Island with her husband, Laird Hunt, and their child.[citation needed]

Awards

Works

Poetry

Hybrid Memoir

Chapbooks

Collaborative Artist Book

Criticism

Anthologies

References

  1. ^ "English & Literary Arts | University of Denver".
  2. ^ Ballard, Jannette (28 August 2013). "Creative writing PhD named one of country's best young poets". University of Denver Magazine Magazine. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  3. ^ "Rattapallax". 2003. ((cite journal)): Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Fernandes, Megan K. (7 November 2012). "Scientific Materialism and Poetics: An Interview with Eleni Sikelianos". California Journal of Poetics. Retrieved 17 October 2013.