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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. Heather White, English professor in
The University of Alabama’s College
of Arts and Sciences, has won the Andrew J. Kappel Prize in
Literary Criticism for her essay “Elizabeth Bishop’s
Calling.”
Twentieth-Century Literature, a journal of literary
criticism, awards the prize annually to the author of a work
submitted to the journal during the preceding year that is
judged to make the most impressive contribution to the study of
20th century literature.
The editor of TCL and members of the editorial board choose
nominees, and a different prominent literary critic serves each
year as judge. This prize includes publication in the summer
issue of TCL and a $500 award.
White received the award for her work about acclaimed poet
Elizabeth Bishop, who died in 1979. Bishop received virtually
every poetry prize in the country, was a chancellor of the
Academy of American Poets, a member of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters and a poetry consultant to the Library of
Congress in 1949-50.
This year’s judge was Dr. Jonathan Culler, an English
professor from Cornell University, whose encomium about
White’s essay also will appear in the issue.
“I’m very pleased with the choice,” said Lee Zimmerman,
TCL editor. “I’ve done some work on Bishop, and [White’s]
is the best piece I’ve read on her in quite some time.”
Bishop received her master’s and doctorate from Cornell
University, where she wrote her dissertation on modern American
poetry, “Dazzling Clarity: Figures of Style in Marianne Moore,
Willa Cather, and Elizabeth Bishop.” White currently is
working on an essay about the contemporary dramatic monologue.
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