Muriel Rukeyser (1913-1980) was a prolific
American writer and political activist. In 1935 her first
collection of poetry, Theory of Flight, won the Yale Younger Poets
Prize, and she went on to publish twelve more volumes of poetry.
She received a National Institute of Arts and Letters award, a
Guggenheim Fellowship, the Levinson Prize for Poetry, and the
Shelley Memorial Award, among other accolades. Rukeyser’s writing
consistently emphasized and utilized cinematic and graphic
techniques, and she explored various connections between the visual
and literary aspects of art. She originally intended The Book of
the Dead to be published with multiple photos by Naumburg.
Catherine Venable Moore is a writer and producer
in Fayette County, West Virginia. A graduate of Harvard University
and the University of Montana, Moore is the recipient of
fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the Vermont Studio Center,
the Highlander Center, the West Virginia Humanities Council, and
others. Her nonfiction has recently appeared in Best American
Essays, Oxford American, VICE, Columbia Journalism Review, and Yes!
She is also an honorary member of the United Mine Workers of
America. Currently, she is at work on a collection of essays.
If Rukeyser had left us only The Book of the Dead and The Life of
Poetry, she would have made a remarkable contribution to American
literature. But the range and daring of her work, its generosity of
vision, its formal innovations, and its level of energy are
unequalled among twentieth-century American poets."" - Adrienne
Rich, introduction to Muriel Rukeyser, Selected Poems
""Muriel Rukeyser’s words are a painful, haunting memorial to an
American crime. Catherine Venable Moore’s graceful essay sets the
work in its time and place, and ties it to today’s struggles."" -
Jedediah Purdy, author of After Nature: A Politics for the
Anthropocene
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