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Nadia Colburn (born December 5, 1972) is an American poet, teacher, literary critic, and writing coach based in Cambridge, MA. She has published poetry and prose in a wide range of national publications and her poetry book The High Shelf was published in 2019.[4][5] She was a founding editor of Anchor Magazine.[6] Nadia Colburn is a recipient of Pen/New England Discovery Award[2] and Jacob K. Javits Fellowship.[3]
Nadia Colburn | |
---|---|
Born | Nadia Herman Colburn December 5, 1972 |
Occupation | Writer, poet, coach, teacher |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Harvard University (B.A) Columbia University (PhD) |
Genre | Poetry |
Notable works | The High Shelf (2019)[1] |
Notable awards | Pen/New England Discovery Award[2] Jacob K. Javits Fellowship[3] |
Website | |
nadiacolburn |
Early life and education
editColburn grew up in New York City.[7] She graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard University with a B.A. in English. She went on to get a Ph.D. in English Literature at Columbia University and has worked as a professor at Lesley, MIT, and at Stonehill College.
Colburn co-founded Anchor Magazine: The Intersection of Spirituality and Social Justice in 2013.[8] She is the founder of the writing school Align Your Story. Her classes combine writing, mindfulness, and embodied practices.[9] Colburn often writes about the environment, social justice, women's issues, and mindfulness.[9] She lives in Cambridge, MA with her husband and two children.
Writing
editColburn's poetry and prose have been published in Harvard Review,[10] Midway Journal,[11] The American Poetry Review,[12][13] The New Yorker,[14] The Southwest Review,[15] Oxford's Literary Imagination, The Kenyon Review,[16] Spirituality and Health,[17] Lion's Roar,[18] and Slate. Her essay "Listening to My Body" was included in The Anatomy of Silence: Twenty-Six Stories About All the Sh** That Gets in the Way of Speaking About Sexual Violence.[19] She was a contributing author in The Cambridge Companion to W.H. Auden.[20] Colburn's debut poetry book on pregnancy, nature, trauma, and love, The High Shelf, was published in 2019.[21] She has written reviews on books and arts for Los Angeles Review of Books,[citation needed] Harvard Review,[10] and Boston Review.[22]
Recognition
edit- Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship[3]
- Jacob K. Javits Fellowship[3]
- Bunner Prize for Best American Essay at Columbia University[citation needed]
- Pen/New England Discovery Award[2][23]
References
edit- ^ "The High Shelf". Kirkus Reviews.
- ^ a b c "Poet Nadia Colburn is featured Sunday at Cohasset Author Talks". Cohaset.
- ^ a b c d Smith, Stan (2005). The Cambridge Companion to W. H. Auden (p. vii). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-53647-2.
- ^ "Nadia Colburn". Staging/Los Angeles Review of Books.
- ^ "Love Poem by Nadia Herman Colburn". Slate.
- ^ "Nadia Colburn". LARB.
- ^ "These B-Schoolers made their dream business a reality". Marie Forleo’s B-School Reviews.
- ^ "Tiny Poem". Still Harbor.
- ^ a b "Meet Nadia Colburn of Nadia Colburn: Align Your Story Mindful Writing and Coaching in Cambridge". Boston Voyager.
- ^ a b "Nadia Herman Colburn". Harvard Review Online.
- ^ "Nadia Colburn". MidWay Journal.
- ^ "VOLUME 45, NO. 06 (November/December)". The American Poetry Review.
- ^ "One's Own Vehicle". Literary Imagination (Volume 12, Issue 2, July 2010).
- ^ "The End". The New Yorker.
- ^ Colburn, Nadia (2009). "Chardin: Love, Painting, Power, and Powerlessness: An excerpt from "New Life": A Memoir of Pregnancy and Early Motherhood". Southwest Review. 94 (4): 532–539. JSTOR 43473024.
- ^ "About Nadia Herman Colburn". Kenyon Review.
- ^ "Nadia Colburn". Spirituality & Health.
- ^ "Colburn's publications". The Lion's Roar.
- ^ "The Anatomy of Silence: Twenty-Six Stories About All The Shit That Gets in the Way of Speaking About Sexual Violence". Publishers Weekly.
- ^ "THE CAMBRIDGE COMPANION TO W.H. AUDEN". VillaNova University.
- ^ "The High Shelf". Eco Theo Review.
- ^ "Content from Nadia Herman Colburn". The Boston Review.
- ^ Colburn, Nadia (2002). "Contributors' Notes". Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art (37): 198–207. JSTOR 41804536.