Nathalie Anderson

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Nathalie Anderson
Born
Nathalie Frances Anderson

(1948-06-02) June 2, 1948 (age 75)
Columbia, South Carolina
Alma materAgnes Scott College
Georgia State University
Emory University
Occupation(s)Poet, author, professor

Nathalie F. Anderson (born 1948) is an American poet and librettist. She is a 1993 Pew Fellow, and author of several books of poetry: Following Fred Astaire, Crawlers, Quiver, Held and Firmly Bound (a chapbook), and Stain. In collaboration with composer Thomas Whitman, she authored four libretti: The Black Swan,[1] Sukey in the Dark, Babylon and A Scandal in Bohemia.[2][3]

Life[edit]

Born in Columbia, South Carolina, Anderson earned her bachelor's degree from Agnes Scott College in 1970, her master's degree from Georgia State University, and her Ph.D. degree from Emory University.[4]

She has been teaching at Swarthmore College since 1982 and is currently a Professor Emerita in their Department of English Literature. She is also Director of their Program in Creative Writing as well as a Poet in Residence at the Rosenbach Museum & Library.[5]

Anderson runs Philadelphia's literary event listserv, Lit-Philly.

Some of Anderson's work has been featured in various print and online journals: Atlanta Review,[6][7] Poetry Daily,[8] Fox Chase Review,[9] Natural Bridge,[10][11][12] The New Yorker,[13] Paris Review,[14][15][16][17] The Recorder: The Journal of American Irish Historical Society,[18] Prairie Schooner,[19][20][21] Denver Quarterly,[22] Nimrod,[23] Inkwell Magazine,[24] The Louisville Review,[25] and Southern Poetry Review.[26]

On November 8, 2012, University of Pennsylvania's Kelly Writers House inaugurated the Eva and Leo Sussman Poetry Program with poetry readings by featured guest writers and instructors, Nathalie Anderson, Elaine Terranova, and Joan Hutton Landis.[27]

Awards[edit]

Works[edit]

Poetry books[edit]

  • Anderson, Nathalie (1978). My Hand, My Only Map: 13 poems. Atlanta, GA: House of Keys. ISBN 9780932656018.
  • Anderson, Nathalie (1998). Following Fred Astaire. Washington, D.C.: The Word Works. ISBN 9780915380411.
  • Anderson, Nathalie (2006). Crawlers: poems. Ashland, OH: Ashland Poetry Press, Ashland University. ISBN 9780912592596.
  • Anderson, Nathalie (2011). Quiver. Rochester, VT: Penstroke Press. ISBN 9780966917789.
  • Anderson, Nathalie (2017). Held and Firmly Bound. Chapin, SC: Muddy Ford Press. ISBN 9781942081104
  • Anderson, Nathalie (2017). Stain. Washington, D.C.: The Word Works. ISBN 9781944585136

Anthology appearances[edit]

  • Alenier, Karren L.; Hilary Tham; Miles D. Moore, eds. (1999). Winners : a retrospective of the Washington Prize. Washington, D.C.: The Word Works. ISBN 9780915380435.
  • Rice, Adrian; Angela Reid, eds. (2002). A Conversation Piece: Poetry and Art. Belfast: Newry: Museums and Galleries of Northern Ireland in association with Abbey Press. ISBN 0900761423. Poets' responses to an exhibition at the Ulster Museum.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Potter, Jacklyn W.; Dwaine Rieves; Gary Stein, eds. (2003). Cabin fever : poets at Joaquin Miller's Cabin, 1984-2001. Washington, D.C.: The Word Works. ISBN 9780915380510.
  • McEneaney, Sarah; Ingrid Schaffner, eds. (2004). Sarah McEneaney. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania. ISBN 9780884541042.
  • Mark, Enid (2004). Ars Botanica. Wallingford, Pa.: ELM Press. ISBN 9780915380411. OCLC 57614320.
  • Follett, CB; Susan Terris, eds. (2005). Runes : a review of poetry, signals. Sausalito, CA: Arctos Press. ISBN 9780972538459.
  • Tobin, Daniel (2007). The book of Irish American poetry: from the eighteenth century to the present. Notre Dame, Ind: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 9780268042301.
  • Datlow, Ellen; Kelly Link; Gavin J. Grant, eds. (2007). The year's best fantasy & horror 2007: twentieth annual collection. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-0312369422.
  • Datlow, Ellen; Kelly Link; Gavin J. Grant, eds. (2008). The year's best fantasy & horror 2008: twentieth annual collection. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 9780312380489.

Performances[edit]

  • Anderson, Nathalie, librettist (September 1998), The Black Swan (a Chamber Opera in Two Acts), Lang Performing Arts Center, Swarthmore College, Philadelphia Pa.: Orchestra 2001. Libretto based on the novel by Thomas Mann.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Anderson, Nathalie, librettist (October 2001), Sukey in the Dark (a Chamber Opera in One Act), Lang Performing Arts Center, Swarthmore College, Philadelphia, Pa.: Orchestra 2001{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Anderson, Nathalie, librettist (March 2005), Babylon (a Composition for Chorus and Orchestra), Irvine Auditorium, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia: The Philadelphia Singers. Libretto based on Psalm 137.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Anderson, Nathalie, librettist (2007), A Scandal in Bohemia (a Chamber Opera in Two Acts), Kimmel Center, Swarthmore College, Philadelphia, Pa.: Orchestra 2001. Libretto based on the story by Arthur Conan Doyle.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Black Swan Synopsis". Archived from the original on 2011-04-14. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
  2. ^ "The Baker Street Journal with a link to an mp3 audio excerpt from A Scandal in Bohemia". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
  3. ^ Thomas Whitman and Nathalie Anderson talk about A Scandal in Bohemia
  4. ^ Swarthmore College Bulletin - Nathalie Anderson
  5. ^ Swarthmore College Bulletin - Nathalie Anderson
  6. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Fall–Winter 2007). "Bersiul". Atlanta Review. 14 (1): 83.
  7. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Fall–Winter 2008). "Revelation: Shatterings at Canterbury". Atlanta Review. 15 (1): 43.
  8. ^ Poetry Daily's Featured Poet for April 28, 2012
  9. ^ 2010 Winter/Spring Fox Chase Review
  10. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (2002). "Country Night, County Donegal". Natural Bridge. Spring 2002: Irish Issue (7).
  11. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (2002). "Early Orangemen on the Road to Armagh". Natural Bridge. Spring 2002: Irish Issue (7).
  12. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (2012). "Celebrity". Natural Bridge. Spring 2012 (27).
  13. ^ Eh? by Nathalie Anderson
  14. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Summer 1988). "Cymophobia: fear of waves". The Paris Review. 30 (107): 46.
  15. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Summer 1988). "Aulophobia: fear of flutes". The Paris Review. 30 (107): 47.
  16. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Summer 1988). "Erythrophobia: fear of blushing". The Paris Review. 30 (107): 48.
  17. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Summer 1988). "Nephophobia: fear of clouds". The Paris Review. 30 (107): 49.
  18. ^ The Recorder, volume 22, no. 2 - Four poems by Nathalie Anderson in this issue
  19. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (1985). "Oralee Dantzler". Prairie Schooner. 59 (4): 89. JSTOR 40631649.
  20. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (1985). "Lost Sisters". Prairie Schooner. 59 (4): 90. JSTOR 40631650.
  21. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (1985). "Gazelles". Prairie Schooner. 59 (4): 91–92. JSTOR 40631651.
  22. ^ Nathalie, Anderson (1989). "Red Sea". Denver Quarterly. 24 (1).
  23. ^ Nathalie, Anderson (1997). "Formic Acid". Nimrod International Journal of Prose and Poetry.
  24. ^ Nathalie, Anderson (2000). "Slow Airs". Inkwell Magazine: 5.
  25. ^ Nathalie, Anderson (1995). "On Purchasing A Second Case Of R. W. Knudsen Family Pomegranate Juice". Louisville Review.
  26. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (Winter 1998). Southern Poetry Review. 38 (2).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  27. ^ Inauguration of the Eva and Leo Sussman Poetry Program including readings by Nathalie Anderson, Elaine Terranova and Joan Hutton Landis. Audio and Video clips of the event can be found here.
  28. ^ Washington Prize List of Winners
  29. ^ "Slow Airs" appeared in the Winter 2000 issue of Inkwell Magazine
  30. ^ North American Review's James Hearst Poetry Prize Winners
  31. ^ Anderson, Nathalie (2004). "Squeeze". North American Review. 289 (2): 6.
  32. ^ Robert McGovern Publication Prize for Crawlers.