Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The composer Matthew Aucoin, Graham’s former student, and the director Peter Sellars have adapted her poems into the operatic “Music for New Bodies.” ...
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Jorie Graham, called one of the most celebrated poets of the American post-war generation, has posted a reply today to a New York Times opinion piece by Michelle Goldberg ...
Jorie Graham, whose work is known for its depth and complexity, makes a plea for moral action. She reads a poem that centers on the problem of human responsibility and talks about the desire for ...
singleness. Nothing is a part of the whole we are a part of. Published in the print edition of the July 7 & 14, 2025, issue. Jorie Graham teaches at Harvard. Her books include the poetry collection ...
The Atlantic: Walt Hunter, chair of the Department of English at the College of Arts and Sciences, discussed the work of American poet, Jorie Graham, who’s often cited as one of the most celebrated ...
Jorie Graham is one of the most well known American poets of the last 40 years. She's published numerous books and won a Pulitzer Prize. A few years ago, she was confronted with a question about what ...
When I first met Jorie Graham around 1980, at a literary party somewhere in the Village, she was a film student at New York University, where, passing a lecture hall on campus one day, she heard words ...
Jorie Graham has won the 2018 Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry for her 2017 collection “Fast.” The biennial award is presented by the Library of Congress and includes a $10,000 prize.
Jorie Graham’s Late WorkHow the poet — living with cancer, reeling from her mother’s death, and isolated on an island — wrote one of the finest books of her long career.