Calvin Forbes
Born: 1945 in Newark, New Jersey
Pen Name: None Connection to Illinois: Forbes lives in Chicago. Biography: Calvin Forbes is a poet, lecturer, and educator. Forbes's career as a writer is paralleled by a distinguished career as an educator. He taught African American literature at Emerson College in Boston from 1969 to 1973, then left to become an assistant professor at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, for a year. He subsequently took a leave of absence and traveled to Denmark, France, and England as a Fulbright scholar. In 1975, Forbes returned to Tufts and continued to teach there until 1977, when he again departed to finish an MFA at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Forbes accepted a position at Howard University in Washington, D.C., in 1978. He won a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1982 and moved to Jamaica, where he worked on an unpublished novel and lectured at the University of the West Indies in Kingston. After returning to teach at Howard and other neighboring colleges and universities, Forbes moved to Chicago. He is an Associate Professor and currently teaches literature and writing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.His poems have also appeared in the anthologies ''A Century in Two Decades: A Burning Deck Anthology, 1961-81'' and ''New Black Voices''.
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Website: http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/454
Calvin Forbes on WorldCat : http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=calvin+forbes
Selected Titles
Blue Monday. ISBN: 0819520705 OCLC: 749719 Wesleyan University Press Middletown, Conn., [1974] |
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From the book of Shine / ISBN: 0930900707 OCLC: 5907056 Burning Deck, Providence, RI : ©1979. |
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The shine poems / ISBN: 0807126667 OCLC: 45015699 Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge : 2001. "Shine is an African American folk character who emerged after World War I in toasts, blues, folk poetry, and children's rhymes. In his new book of poems, Calvin Forbes reinvents Shine, giving him a girlfriend, Glow, and a child, Shade. He renders the figure more melancholy and adds traces of the surreal and slapstick - accessories "typical of the folk dibbling and dabbling as the tradition is passed along."" "While only the last quarter of The Shine Poems concern Shine, all of the poems reflect a similar sensibility. They share the narrative threads of family relationships and personal and social history while they test the full possibilities of colloquial language and speech rhythms in verse."--Jacket. |