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Lia Purpura: It Shouldn't Have Been Beautiful

Lia Purpura: It Shouldn't Have Been Beautiful

Humanities Forum
Lia Purpura, writer-in-residence, English, UMBC
It Shouldn't Have Been Beautiful

Tuesday, March 1, 4 p.m.
Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery

It Shouldn’t Have Been Beautiful harkens back to an early affinity for proverbs and riddles and the proto-poetry found in those forms. Taking on epic subjects—time and memory, metamorphosis and indeterminacy, the complicated nature of beauty, wordless states of being—each poem explores a bright, crisp, singular moment of awareness or shock or revelation. Purpura poignantly reminds us that short poems, never merely brief nor fragmentary, can transcend their size. Her poetic language is an instrument of a unique thinking that seeks to explain that nothing is just what it says—morning is a “blade stripping away,” uncertainty is a “big project for the future,” the occasion for a prayer could be a “spot of sun, / bar sign, label / on jeans, / …or a name the length of a subway car / that makes sense / when you say it aloud / in your head / as it passes.”

Lia Purpura is the author of three collections of poems, The Brighter the Veil, Stone Sky Lifting, and King Baby, and three collections of essays, Increase, Rough Likeness, and On Looking, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is the recipient of Guggenheim, National Endowment for the Arts, and Fulbright Fellowships as well as three Pushcart prizes, among other honors. Her work appears frequently in The New Yorker, as well as in The Paris Review, Orion, Agni, Best American Essays and other publications. She is writer in residence in the English Department at UMBC.

This event is free and open to the public.

Sponsored by the UMBC Dresher Center for the Humanities and the Department of English.

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Tuesday, March 1, 2016, 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Free

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