Stacy Doris

Stacy Doris (May 21, 1962 – January 31, 2012) was a poet who wrote in English[1][2] and French.[3][4] Doris used the name "Madame Wiener" or «Sa Femme»[5] in some of her French work.

Life and work

Stacy Doris was an innovative writer who imparted her “ferocity of living and invention” as she created new worlds of relationships with each book.[6][7][8] As a teacher, each semester she would offer deep, exploratory seminars in different topics. For Doris, writing, learning, living and romancing were all in the service of one another.[9][10]

Doris was influential in bridging the worlds of French and American poetry through her own fictions, as well as in the anthologies she edited. Some examples include The Violence of the White Page (Tyuonyi, 1991),[11] with Emmanuel Hocquard, Twenty-two New (to North America) French Poets (Raddle Moon, 1997),[12] with Norma Cole, and from French to English, Quelques-uns de mes contemporains: New American Writers (Java 2001).[13]

Doris was an associate professor of creative writing at San Francisco State University,[14] where a poetry award has been created in her honour.[15] Her last published works were Fledge: A Phenomenology of Spirit (Nightboat Books, 2013), which she completed shortly before her death, and The Cake Part (Publication Studio, 2011)[16] of which some 50 poets, film-makers and other artists contributed to making short films for the launch (see Cake Part Virtual Launch).

Bibliography

Books

  • Fledge: a Phenomenology of Spirit (Night-boat Books, Callicoon, NY, 2012)
  • The Cake Part (Portland, OR: Publication Studio) 2011.
  • Paramour trans. Anne Porutgal and Caroline Dubois (Paris: P.O.L) 2009.
  • Knot (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press) 2006. Winner of the University of *Georgia Contemporary Poetry Series Award.
  • Parlement (Paris: P.O.L) 2005.
  • Cheerleader’s Guide to the World : Council Book (NY: Roof) 2006.
  • Conference (Bedford MA: Potes & Poets) 2001.
  • Une Année à New York avec Chester (Paris: P.O.L) 2000.
  • Paramour (San Francisco: Krupskaya) 2000.
  • La Vie de Chester Steven Wiener écrite par sa femme (Paris: P.O.L) 1998.
  • Comment Aimer, trans. Anne Portugal and Caroline Dubois of Paramour excerpts (Grâne, France: Créaphis) 1998.
  • Kildare (NY: Roof) 1995. Reprint at Kildare EPC

Audio compositions

  • Parlement (l'Atelier de Création Radiophonique, France Culture Radio, director Jean Couturier) Original broadcast November 13, 2005. Rebroadcast at ACR, FranceCulture

Chapbooks

  • Le temps est à chacun, trans. Martin Richet from Knot (Marseille: Contrat Main) 2002.
  • Kildare, trans. Juliette Valery (Bordeaux: Format Américain) 1995.
  • Implements for Use (St. Denis: A. Slacik) 1995.
  • Mop Factory Incident (NY: Women's Studio) 1995. Reprint at: Mop Factory Incident WSW

Anthologies and collections

  • Editor, "Quelques-uns de mes contemporains: New American Writers," (Paris: Java) 2001.
  • Co-editor (with Chet Wiener), Christophe Tarkos: Ma Langue est Poétique--Selected Work (New York: Roof) 2001.
  • Editor, "Recent French Poetics" in Poetry on the Edge; a Symposium (Durham, NC: Duke University) 1999.
  • Co-editor (with Norma Cole), Twenty-two New (to North America) French Poets (Vancouver: Raddle Moon) 1997.
  • Co-editor (with Emmanuel Hocquard), Violence of the White Page, Contemporary French Poetry in Translation (Santa Fe, NM: Pederal) 1992. Reprint at ViolenceWhitePage Duration

Notes and references

  1. "Stacy Doris". Penn Sound (University of Pennsylvania). Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  2. Harriet Staff (February 3, 2012). "With Respect:Stacy Doris". Poetry foundation. Retrieved July 29, 2014.
  3. "Stacy Doris" (in French). Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  4. "L'intraduisible Stacy Doris" (in French). October 10, 2012. Archived from the original on July 30, 2014. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  5. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Sa femme lit "La Vie de Chester Steven Wiener.mov. YouTube.
  6. "With Respect: Stacy Doris, 1962-2012 by Harriet… | Poetry Foundation". 21 March 2022.
  7. "SF State creative writing professor Stacy Doris dies of cancer".
  8. "Evening Will Come".
  9. "Evening Will Come".
  10. "Stacy Doris : A Little Memoir by Ann Lauterbach | Jacket2".
  11. Stacy Doris; Phillip Foss; Emmanuel Hocquard (1991). Violence of the White Page. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  12. Stacy Doris; Norma Cole. Raddle Moon 16 : Modern French Poetry in Translation. Archived from the original on January 28, 2015. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  13. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=34415765&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue
  14. "In Memoriam Stacy Doris", San Francisco State University Campus Memo, retrieved July 19, 2014
  15. Stacy Doris (November 20, 2013), New poetry award created in memory of Professor Stacy Doris, retrieved July 19, 2014
  16. Stacy Doris. "The Cake Part". Retrieved July 19, 2014.
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