Serge Gavronsky
Appearance
Serge Gavronsky (born (1932 Paris) is an American poet and translator.
Life
He fled Hitler in 1941. He graduated from Columbia University,[1] and is now professor and chair of the French department at Barnard College.[2] He lives in New York City.[3]
Awards
- 1979 Guggenheim Fellowship[4]
- 1980 Camargo Foundation Fellowship[5]
Works
Poetry
- Lectures et compte-rendu, poèmes. Coll. "Textes", Flammarion, 1973.
- Je le suis, poème, illustrations by Michel Kanter, artists’s edition, 1995.
- L’interminable discussion, poem with six original woodcuts by JM. Scanreigh. Editions Philippe Millereau, 1996.
- Reduction du tryptique, poème, with 4 original woodcuts by Scanreigh, Philippe Millereau, 1996.
- Serge Gavronsky, AndOrThe: Poems Within A Poem (Talisman House, 2007)
Translation
- Poems & texts; an anthology of French poems: translations, and interviews with Ponge, Follain, Guillevic, Frénaud, Bonnefoy, DuBouchet, Roche, and Pleynet. October House. 1969.
- Patricia Terry, Serge Gavronsky, ed. (1975). Modern French Poetry : a Bilingual Anthology. Columbia University Press.
- Six contemporary French women poets: theory, practice, and pleasures. Southern Illinois University Press. 1997.
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Criticism
- "BLACK THEMES IN SUREAL GUISE". The New York Times. February 19, 1984.
- Gavronsky, Serge (November 5, 1989). "'DON'T ASK. ACT'". The New York Times. Retrieved May 23, 2010.