The Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards

The Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards are a pair of American prizes based at Claremont Graduate University. They are given to poets for their collections of poetry written in the English language, by a citizen or legal resident alien of the United States.[1]

The Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards
LocationClaremont, California
CountryUnited States
Presented byClaremont Graduate University
First awarded1993/1994
WebsiteThe Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards

The Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award is a $100,000 prize presented to a mid-career, emerging poet who already possesses an established body of work. The Kingsley Tufts award is known to be one of the world's most lucrative poetry prizes.

Its counterpart, the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, is given to a poet who demonstrates genuine promise in their first book of published poetry, with an attached purse of $10,000.

History

Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award

Young Kingsley Tufts

Kingsley Tufts held executive positions in the Los Angeles shipyards and wrote poetry as his avocation. His poetry has been featured in The New Yorker, Esquire, and Harpers, among other publications.

Following his death in 1991, Kingsley's wife, Kate, sold her home and the majority of the couple's estate in order to fund an endowment to help poets further their craft. She established the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award in 1993 at Claremont Graduate University in Claremont, California.

Initially, the award was for $50,000, and has subsequently doubled due to increases in the endowment. It is intended for an emerging poet who is past the very beginning but has not yet reached the acknowledged pinnacle of their career.

Kate Tufts had no prior affiliation with Claremont Graduate University, but when she met then-university President John Maguire and visited the campus, she became convinced that it was the perfect home for her poetry prize.[2]

Unlike many literary awards, which are coronations for a successful career or body of work, the Kingsley Tufts award was created to both honor the poet and provide the resources that allow artists to continue working.

Kate Tufts said she wanted to create a prize "that would enable a poet to work on his or her craft for a while without paying bills."

The Kate Tufts Discovery Award

Kate Tufts

In 1994, just a year after the inauguration of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award, Kate Tufts founded the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, which began in the amount of $5,000, but has since doubled to $10,000.

Kate Tufts died in June 1997, at the age of 86. While she did not live to see her awards grow to become some of the largest poetry prizes in the world, she certainly took pride in their inception while she was alive.

Doug Anderson, 1995 Kate Tufts Discovery Award recipient, remembers her sardonic wit when meeting her that year: "She came into the room at the Claremont Graduate School grumbling that she couldn't smoke in there, and then she stopped and looked at Tom Lux [that year's Kingsley Tufts award recipient] and myself. Kate Tufts looked at us and said, 'You don't know how glad I am that this year's awards were given to a couple of really disreputable poets.'"[2]

Judging

Both awards go through two phases of judging. A preliminary panel of three judges screens the approximately 400 combined applications that are received for both awards. They then pass on finalists to the final judges.

The final panel is composed of five distinguished judges, representing a cross-section of the American poetry community.

2020

The panel of final judges for the 2017 Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards is:

Timothy Donnelly, chair; poet, associate professor at Columbia University, and previous editor of the Boston Review

Cathy Park Hong, poet, poetry editor at the New Republic, and professor at Rutgers University–Newark.

Meghan O’Rourke, poet, essayist, memoirist, and editor of the Yale Review.

Luis J. Rodriguez, poet, writer, and founding editor of Tia Chucha Press

Sandy Solomon, poet and teacher at Vanderbilt University

2019

The panel of final judges for the 2017 Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards is:

Timothy Donnelly, chair; poet, associate professor at Columbia University, and previous editor of the Boston Review

Cathy Park Hong, poet, poetry editor at the New Republic, and professor at Rutgers University–Newark.

Khadijah Queen, poet, playwright, and Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Luis J. Rodriguez, poet, writer, and founding editor of Tia Chucha Press

Sandy Solomon, poet and teacher at Vanderbilt University

2017

The panel of final judges for the 2017 Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards[3] is:

Don Share, chair; poet and editor of Poetry magazine

Elena Karina Byrne, poet, poetry curator/moderator for the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books

Terrance Hayes, 2000 Kate Tufts Discovery Award recipient, poet, and professor at the University of Pittsburgh

Meghan O'Rourke, poet, essayist, editor, and literary critic

Brian Kim Stefans, poet and professor of English at University of California, Los Angeles

2012

The panel of final judges for the 2012 Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards[4] is:

Linda Gregerson, poet, professor at the University of Michigan, and past Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award recipient

David Barber, poet, poetry editor of The Atlantic Monthly

Kate Gale, poet, novelist, managing editor of Red Hen Press

Ted Genoways, award-winning poet and Editor of the Virginia Quarterly Review

Carl Phillips, poet, professor at Washington University in St. Louis, and past Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award recipient

The panel of preliminary judges for the 2012 competition includes:

Jericho Brown, poet, Assistant Professor of English at the University of San Diego

Andrew Feld, poet, editor of the Seattle Review, and assistant professor at the University of Washington

Jennifer Chang, poet, Assistant Professor of creative writing at Bowling Green State University

Distinguished past judges

Paul Muldoon, Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winner, and poetry editor of The New Yorker

Robert Pinsky, poet, past Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, and poetry editor at Slate

Charles Harper Webb, Guggenheim Fellowship recipient in 2001, and professor at California State University Long Beach

Submission requirements/deadlines

Submissions are due annually on July 1, and eligible work has to have been published the previous year (between July and June). Manuscripts, CDs, and chapbooks are not accepted.

Awards ceremony

Award winners are announced in the February following the July deadline, with a ceremony and presentation of the awards in April, national poetry month. The ceremony takes place on the Claremont Graduate University Campus, and winners are required to accept their award in person.

Distinguished speakers at the Awards Ceremony have included Kathy Bates in 2002,[5] Leonard Nimoy in 2007,[6] and Maxine Hong Kingston in 2012.

Restrictions

A single work may be submitted for either award only once, although the winner of the Kate Tufts Discovery Award may submit another work in a later year for the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award.

The Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award winner, by accepting the award, agrees to spend one week in residence at Claremont Graduate University for lectures and poetry readings in Claremont and the greater Los Angeles area.

The poet must be an American citizen or legal residential alien of the United States.[7]

Winners

YearKingsley Tufts Poetry AwardKate Tufts Discovery Award
2020Ariana ReinesA Sand BookTiana ClarkI Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood
2019Dawn Lundy MartinGood Stock Strange BloodDiana Khoi NguyenGhost Of
2018Patricia SmithIncendiary ArtDonika KellyBestiary
2017Vievee FrancisForest PrimevalPhillip B. WilliamsThief in the Interior
2016Ross GayCatalog of Unabashed GratitudeDanez Smith[insert] boy
2015Angie EstesEnchantéeBrandon SomThe Tribute Horse
2014Afaa Michael WeaverThe Government of NatureYona HarveyHemming the Water
2013Marianne BoruchThe Book of HoursHeidy Steidlmayer — Fowling Piece
2012Timothy DonnellyThe Cloud CorporationKatherine LarsonRadial Symmetry
2011Chase TwichellHorses Where the Answers Should Have BeenAtsuro RileyRomey's Order
2010D.A. PowellChronicBeth BachmannTemper
2009Matthea HarveyModern LifeMatthew DickmanAll-American Poem
2008Tom SleighSpace WalkJanice N. HarringtonEven the Hollow My Body Made is Gone
2007Rodney JonesSalvation BluesEric McHenryPotscrubber Lullabies
2006Lucia PerilloLuck Is LuckChristian HawkeyThe Book of Funnels
2005Michael RyanNew and Selected PoemsPatrick PhillipsChattahoochee
2004Henri ColeMiddle EarthAdrian BlevinsThe Brass Girl Brouhaha
2003Linda GregersonWaterborneJoanie MackowskiThe Zoo
2002Carl PhillipsThe TetherCate MarvinWorld's Tallest Disaster
2001Alan ShapiroThe Dead Alive and BusyJennifer ClarvoeInvisible Tender
2000Robert WrigleyReign of SnakesTerrance HayesMuscular Music
1999B.H. Fairchild — The Art of the LatheBarbara RasBite Every Sorrow
1998John KoetheFalling WaterCharles Harper WebbReading the Water
1997Campbell McGrathSpring Comes to ChicagoLucia PerilloThe Body Mutinies
1996Deborah DiggesRough MusicBarbara HambyDelirium
1995Thomas LuxSplit HorizonDoug AndersonThe Moon Reflected Fire
1994Yusef KomunyakaaNeon VernacularCatherine Bowman1-800-HOT-RIBS
1993Susan MitchellRaptureNot Awarded

References

  1. "About the Awards". Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  2. "Tufts Poetry Awards 2008". Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  3. "The Tufts Poetry Awards Judges". Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved 2017-01-30.
  4. "The Tufts Poetry Awards Judges". Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  5. "Kathy Bates assists in honoring poets". University of La Verne. 2002-05-02. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  6. "Awards". Beyond Spock: Leonard Nimoy Fan Page. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  7. "Eligibility", Tufts Poetry Awards, Claremont Graduate University.
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