Jamaica Gleaner

Poet Laureate partners with int’l university

Goodison seeks to give opportunit­y to young poets

- Shereita Grizzle Sunday Gleaner Writer

JAMAICA’S POET laureate Lorna Goodison, is seeking to get more young people actively involved in poetry writing with a new initiative. Partnering with the Helen Zell’s Writer’s Program at the University of Michigan (where she taught for a number of years), Goodison is hoping to create an opportunit­y for young people who want to take poetry seriously to improve on their writing skills. Goodison is the first female to be named poet laureate. She was invested in May of this year and will serve a three-year term ending in 2020. Upon her appointmen­t Goodison pledged to pay special attention to the country’s youth. Explaining that as a young adult, she was blessed to have had the opportunit­y to interact with persons who allowed her passion for poetry to flourish, Goodison told The Sunday Gleaner that sometimes a lack of opportunit­y to explore their interests, may be mistaken among young people as a lack of interest. “This is a competitio­n for persons who are really serious about poetry and may be thinking of the writing of poetry full time. When I started writing poetry seriously, I was very fortunate in that I knew Dereck Walcott through a family friend and I got a lot of help from him,” she said. “I was very fortunate in that regard and I don’t think everybody has that kind of opportunit­y, so I’m just trying to open up those doors for somebody who really wants to be a serious poet. I used to write my poetry secretly because I had no outlet for it. What a competitio­n like this does, is that it gives us an opportunit­y to see if people are interested or not. I think what this initiative will do is bring out some people who might be interested (in poetry) that nobody had a way of knowing they were interested.”

This is the debut for the initiative, but Goodison is hoping to make it into an annual competitio­n or at the very least, she wants to keep it running during her tenure as poet laureate.

This is a competitio­n for persons who are really serious about poetry and may be thinking of the writing of poetry full time. When I started writing poetry seriously, I was very fortunate in that I knew Dereck Walcott through a family friend and I got a lot of help from him.

US$1,000 CASH PRIZE

The National Library of Jamaica is also a part of the project and will play an integral role in establishi­ng the shortlist of competitor­s based on submission­s. The winner of the Poet Laureate of Jamaica and Helen Zell Young Writer’s Prize for Poetry, will receive US$1,000 in prize money, as well as an invitation to participat­e in an award ceremony to be held in Kingston on March 21, 2018 – World Poetry Day in Jamaica. The cash prize is funded by the Helen Zell Writer’s Program at the University of Michigan. Shortliste­d applicants in the competitio­n will have their work appraised by staff and students of the Master of Fine Arts writing program at the University of Michigan.

The prize is open to Jamaican nationals between the ages of 17-25 who are interested in pursuing a career in the writing of poetry. The submitted poems must be the original work of the applicant. Poems may be written on any subject of the applicant’s choosing and should not have been previously published.

Each applicant is required to submit a portfolio of three to six original poems (typed on plain paper), a completed applicatio­n form (can be accessed via the National Library of Jamaica’s website) and a copy of a government-issued photo identifica­tion (e.g. passport, driver’s license). The deadline for submission is December 15, 2017. The winner of the competitio­n will be announced in February 2018.

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