Photo: Antonin Kratochvil
Awarded to:
Eliza Griswold
for her work collecting and introducing the folk poems of Afghan women to America
Please join us in honoring Eliza and her essential work:
Friday, November 1, 2013
6-9pm
Goethe-Institut
812 7th St, NW
Washington, DC 20001
Reception * Awards Ceremony * Reading
With special performances by the DC Youth Slam Team
Contact: (202) 787-5210
The Freedom Plow Award, made possible through the generosity of the CrossCurrents Foundation,
recognizes and honors a poet who is doing innovative and
transformative work at the intersection of poetry and social change.
Judged by Martha Collins, Carlos Andrés Gómez, and E. Ethelbert Miller, it is being given for the first time in 2013. Finalists for the award are Jorge Argueta, Elana Bell, Tim Z. Hernandez, and Wang Ping.
Eliza Griswold received a Guggenheim Fellowship for her ongoing work on water and poverty in America. Her first non-fiction book, The Tenth Parallel, was awarded the Anthony J. Lukas prize and was a New York Times bestseller. Her poetry and reportage has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, The Atlantic,
among many others. She's held fellowships at Harvard University and at
the New America Foundation. Her collection of reportage and translations
of Afghan folk poetry, I am the Beggar of the World, will be published in the Spring of 2014 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux with a second collection of her poems to follow.
In
2012 Griswold began traveling to rural Afghanistan with the
photographer Seamus Murphy to collect landays, two-line folk poems
written and recited by Afghan women. The landays, Murphy's photos, and
Griswold's writings about the experience have introduced rural Afghan
women -- an otherwise invisible population, despite more the than 10
years our two countries have been entangled in war -- to American
readers and television viewers. Poetry Magazine devoted an
entire issue to the landays and published Griswold's long essay on the
documentation project, with photos, on their website. She's written
about the project for the NYTimes Magazine and it was profiled on the PBS NewsHour.
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