This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2021) |
Oxford Poets is an imprint of the British poetry publisher Carcanet Press.
The imprint was established in March 1999 when the founder and editor of Carcanet Press, Michael Schmidt, acquired the Oxford University Press poetry list. OUP's authors had included such critically acclaimed poets as Fleur Adcock, Joseph Brodsky, Greg Delanty, Alice Oswald, Craig Raine, and Jo Shapcott. Oxford University Press's decision to abandon its poetry list in November 1998 provoked a literary firestorm in the British media.
Though published by Carcanet, the Oxford Poets list has retained an element of editorial independence. Two major contemporary writers, the Irish poet Bernard O'Donoghue and the English poet, editor, and translator David Constantine currently oversee the imprint.
References
edit- Robert Potts, 'Neither rhyme nor reason', The Guardian, 24 November 1998
- James Fenton, 'Beware the Philistines of Publishing', The Times (London), 25 November 1998
- Robin Young, 'Oxford's dead poet's society is resurrected', The Times, 8 March 1999