|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Robin Behn, acclaimed poet and English
professor in The University of Alabama College
of Arts and Sciences, has been selected this year’s
recipient of the Burnum Distinguished Faculty Award.
On March 4 at 4:30 p.m., Behn will be presented with the
award during a ceremony in Morgan Hall auditorium, after which
she will present a poetry reading.
The Burnum Award is one of the highest honors the Capstone
bestows on its faculty. The award is presented annually to a
professor who is judged by a faculty selection committee to have
demonstrated superior scholarly or artistic achievements and
profound dedication to the art of teaching.
The award was established by Dr. and Mrs. John F. Burnum of
Tuscaloosa to recognize and promote excellence in research,
scholarship and teaching.
Behn has served on the UA faculty for 15 years and holds a
bachelor’s degree in creative writing from Oberlin College, a
master’s degree in English from the University of
Missouri-Columbia and a master of fine arts degree in English
from the University of Iowa.
“Winning the Burnum Award is a tremendous honor,” Behn
said. “My life as a poet at UA over the last 15 years has
taken place within a community of dedicated writers, both
colleagues and students, who have been a daily inspiration to
me. They are a various and invigorating bunch, and I believe we
have kept one another at it, having serious and fearless fun
with language.
“UA has been supportive of a large number of talented
writers who have come from all over Alabama, and the country,
and the world, with their pencils or their keyboards, to take
this familiar medium-words-this thing we talk with all day long,
and rearrange it into something that rattles or spars or
sings...,” she continued. “The arts are an integral part of
a university education, a vital way of knowing. Whether writing
or teaching, I hope to bring that way of knowing to others.
Behn’s writing has “had a profound impact on many
readers,” said Dr. John W. Crowley, professor and chair of the
UA English department, in nominating Behn for the award. “It
must also be said that Professor Behn has distinguished herself
as a teacher and mentor. One colleague praised her willingness
to ‘go the extra mile’ to help students develop their own
work, to explore their talent in whatever direction it takes
them … Her pedagogical textbook, “The Practice of Poetry,”
has carried her thoughts on teaching to a national audience,”
Crowley noted.
Since 1990, Behn has been honored with several major grants
and awards, including a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 1999
-- one of the nation’s most prestigious awards for academic or
artistic achievement. Last year, she received the Award for
Excellence in Teaching from the Vermont College M.F.A. in
Writing Program, and in 2001 she received the Brittingham Prize
from the University of Wisconsin Press for her book “Horizon
Note.”
In 1993, she received the Pushcart Prize, and in 1991, she
received both a National Endowment for the Arts Individual
Artist Grant and Alabama State Council on the Arts Individual
Artist Grant. She continues to give readings of her poetry
around the country.
In January, Behn was elected to the board of directors of the
Associated Writing Programs, a national organization.
“I come from a family of teachers,” she said. “My
father was an English teacher at Barrington High School in
Illinois. He taught me that teaching is a calling, a noble
profession. He never missed a day of teaching in 30 years, and
every day he looked forward to getting students excited about
words and taking a real interest in what they wrote. I try to
carry some of that forward.”
At UA, Behn has taught courses in creative writing, poetry
writing, forms of poetry, aspects of performance and, with
co-teacher UA Professor of Dance Cornelius Carter, words and
dance. She has been the director of the M.F.A. Program in
Creative Writing, and directed many M.F.A. theses in poetry. She
is active on campus and has served on the Research Advisory
Committee, Media Planning Board, Undergraduate Mentoring Program
steering committee and the Blount Undergraduate Initiative
steering committee.
She has published three books of poetry, “Horizon Note”
(University of Wisconsin Press, 2001), “The Red Hour”
(HarperCollins, 1993), and “Paper Bird” (Texas Tech
University Press, 1988) and has co-edited “The Practice of
Poetry: Writing Exercises from Poets Who Teach”
(HarperCollins, 1992).
Behn’s poems have appeared in numerous journals such as
“Poetry,” “The American Poetry Review,” “Kenyon
Review” and “The Iowa Review,” and in anthologies such as
“Poets of the New Century,” “The Pushcart Prize
Anthology,” and “The Best American Poetry,” as well as the
website “Poetry Daily.” A recent essay, “In the Music
Room,” appeared in “Planet on the Table” (Sarabande Books,
2002).
Burnum Award honoree names are permanently displayed on a
bronze plaque in the lobby of UA’s Rose Administration
Building. Behn is married to Dr. Stephen Tomlinson, UA associate
professor of education. Their 6-year-old son, Simon, attends The
Capitol School.
|