Barbara Jordan
Quick Facts
Biography
Barbara Jordan (born 1949) is an American poet and academic.
Life
She is a professor of English at University of Rochester, and Plutzik Memorial Series director.
Her work has appeared in Paris Review, Sulfur, The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Harvard Review.
Awards
- 1989 Barnard Women Poets Prize
Works
- Tutelary poems. Radio Cologne.
- Channel. Beacon Press. 1990. ISBN 978-0-8070-6809-0.
- Trace elements. Penguin Books. 1998.
Essays
- "Vision as Appetite: Clampitt as Naturalist". Antietam Review. xii. Spring 1992. Archived from the original on 2008-10-06.
Reviews
Barbara Jordan's second collection, while more syntactically scumbled and abstract than her first, proceeds in a similar manner. Like a botanist crossed with a postulant, Jordan maps onto the natural world the disquieted speculations of a religious contemplative. In "Meander," Jordan calls on the renowned Bishop of Hippo to illustrate her method:
"Consciousness as landscape, /
Augustine was mindful of it. `The caverns of memory,' /
he wrote, /
`the mountains and hills of my high imagination.'"The consciousness that permeates Jordan's landscapes, however, is of a decidedly more modern, Poundian variety.