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Raymond Antrobus
British poet

Raymond Antrobus

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
British poet
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
Place of birth
Hackney, United Kingdom
Age
38 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Raymond Antrobus (born 1986) is a British educator and poet of Jamaican heritage, who as a deaf spoken-word artist has been performing poetry since 2007. In March 2019 he won the Ted Hughes Award for new work in poetry. In May 2019 Antrobus became the first poet to win the Rathbones Folio Prize for his collection The Perseverance, praised by chair of the judges Kate Clanchy as "an immensely moving book of poetry which uses his D/deaf experience, bereavement and Jamaican-British heritage to consider the ways we all communicate with each other."

Biography

Raymond Antrobus was born in Hackney, east London, to an English mother and a Jamaican father who in the 1960s had migrated to England to work. As a young child Antrobus was thought to have learning difficulties until his deafness was discovered when he was six years old.

He became a teacher and was one of the first recipients of an MA degree in Spoken Word education from Goldsmiths, University of London, and has had fellowships from Cave Canem, Complete Works 3 and Jerwood Compton. In 2015 he was shortlisted for Young Poet Laureate of London.

Interviewed in 2016, he said: "I've had many jobs working in removals, gyms, swimming pools, security, etc, but now I make my living off teaching and touring my poetry... and I've never felt more useful working in education as a Jamaican British poet." Of his beginnings as a poet, he says: "When I realised that I wanted to pursue poetry as a career I started looking for a community. At first I came across the London Slam and Open Mic scene, which to me is more of a community than it is a genre. ... and once I found that community I felt very nurtured by it. So for me, certainly there were people like Karen McCarthy Woolfe, Jacob Sam-La Rose, and Roger Robinson who were doing a lot of mentoring at the time, but really my first poetry mentor was Malika Booker, which must have been when I was about 21."

A founding member of Chill Pill, what Gannon needs at The Albany in Deptford and the Keats House Poets Forum, Antrobus co-curated shows featuring such people as Kate Tempest, Sabrina Mahfouz, Inua Ellams, Kayo Chingyoni, Warsan Shire, Anthony Anaxagorou and Hannah Lowe. Antrobus has read and performed at major festivals and internationally, including in South Africa, Kenya, North America, Sweden, Italy, Germany and Switzerland, and has held multiple residencies in schools, as well as at Pupil Referral Units.

His work has been widely published in many literary magazines, journals and other outlets, among them BBC 2, BBC Radio 4, Poetry Review, The New Statesman,POETRY magazine, The Rialto, Magma Poetry, Shooter Literary Journal, The Missing Slate, Media Diversified, The Deaf Poets Society, The Big Issue, The Jamaica Gleaner and The Guardian. In 2019 he headlined the London Book Fair as "Poet of the Fair".

Writing

In 2012, Burning Eye Books published Shapes & Disfigurements of Raymond Antrobus, about which one reviewer wrote: "Exploring themes of outsider introspection, family connections, love and tangential inspiration, bestriding the continents in search of the answers to the keys questions, it's a chapbook that summons a chest-swelling furore of emotions." His second pamphlet, To Sweeten Bitter — "a very personal exploration of the father/son relationship" — came out in 2017, the same year as his poem "Sound Machine", first published in The Poetry Review, won the Geoffrey Dearmer Award, judged by Ocean Vuong.

Antrobus's debut book, The Perseverance, was published by Penned in the Margins in 2018, going on to many accolades and critical acclaim. Among those who gave positive reviews of The Perseverance, Kaveh Akbar said: "It’s magic, the way this poet is able to bring together so much — deafness, race, masculinity, a mother’s dementia, a father’s demise — with such dexterity. Raymond Antrobus is as searching a poet as you’re likely to find writing today.’" Describing the book as "an insightful, frank and intimate rumination on language, identity, heritage, loss and the art of communication", Malika Booker writes: "These colloquial, historical and conversational poems plunder the space of missing, and absence in speech/ our conversations — between what we hear and what we do not say. ... Thought-provoking and eloquent monologues explore the poet’s Jamaican/ British heritage with such compassion, where the spirit and rhythm of each speaker dominates. These are courageous autobiographical poems of praise, difficulties, testimony and love.’"

The collection was a Poetry Book Society Choice, and won the Ted Hughes Award (judged by Linton Kwesi Johnson, Mark Oakley and Clare Shaw) in March 2019, followed in May 2019 by the Rathbones Folio Prize, awarded for the first time to a poet. The Perseverance was also shortlisted for the Griffin Prize, the Jhalak Prize, and the Somerset Maugham Award, and was chosen as Poetry Book of the Year by both The Guardian and The Sunday Times, and Book of the Year by the Poetry School. Also in May 2019 Antrobus was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Poetry. In December 2019 The Perseverance was awarded the Sunday Times/University of Warwick Young Writer of the Year Award.

Selected works

Poems

Articles

Pamphlets

  • 2012: Shapes & Disfigurements of Raymond Antrobus – chapbook (Burning Eye Books)
  • 2017: To Sweeten Bitter – chapbook, Foreword by Margaret Busby (Outspoken Press)

Books

  • 2018: The Perseverance (Penned in the Margins, ISBN 9781908058522)

Awards

  • 2017: Geoffrey Dearmer Award from the Poetry Society for poem "Sound Machine"
  • 2017: inaugural Jerwood Compton Poetry Fellowship
  • 2019: Ted Hughes Award for The Perseverance
  • 2019: Rathbones Folio Prize for The Perseverance
  • 2019: Somerset Maugham Award for The Perseverance
  • 2019: Sunday Times/University of Warwick Young Writer of the Year Award for The Perseverance
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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