Michael Anania

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Michael Anania (August 5, 1939) is an American poet, novelist, and essayist. His poetry meticulously evokes Midwestern prairies and rivers. His autobiographical novel, Red Menace, captured mid-twentieth century cold war angst and the colloquial speech of Nebraska, while the voice in his volumes of poetry distinctively reflects rural and urban Midwestern life in a "mixture of personal voice, historical fact, journalistic observation and a haiku-like format that pares lines down to the bare bones and pushes language to its limit."[1]

Biography

Anania was born in Omaha, Nebraska. He grew up in a housing project and attended inner-city public schools in Omaha. He studied first at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, and then completed his BA at the Municipal University of Omaha (now University of Nebraska Omaha).[2]

Seeking to work with the archives of the works of poet William Carlos Williams, Anania pursued graduate work in the 1960s at SUNY Buffalo. While in New York state he taught for a year at SUNY Fredonia. He left New York in 1965 to teach for three years at Northwestern University before being hired at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where, along with Ralph J. Mills, Jr., he was one of the founding members of the Program for Writers in the UIC English Department, where he is now an emeritus professor.

In 1960 he married Joanne Oliver, a specialist in adult literacy who taught in public schools in Nebraska, New York, and Illinois, and later at Governors State University.[3]

Besides his work as a creative writing professor, Anania was also influential as an editor, serving as the poetry editor for Audit, and for Partisan Review, as the poetry and literary editor of The Swallow Press, as a contributing editor to Tri-Quarterly and VENUE, as well as serving on the boards of Wesleyan University Press, Prairie State Editions of the University of Illinois Press, Thunder’s Mouth Press, Encyclopedia of Chicago History, and Dalkey Archive Press. His papers from the 1950s through 2006 are archived at the University of Chicago Library.[4]

Awards

Works by and about Anania were collected in a special themed issue of Valley Voices: A Literary Review in 2016.[5]

He won the Friends of Literature Poetry Prize (1970)

He was awarded a Roadstead Fellowship (1970-1972)

Best Short Stories (1979)

Pushcart Prize (1980)

Illinois Arts Council Fellowship in Fiction (1980)

He received five Arts Council Literary Awards (1974-1989)

National Magazine Award (1981)

Illinois Association of Teachers of English, Author of the Year (1985)

Independent Booksellers Association Award for Best Paperback Novel (for The Red Menace) (1994)

Key publications

Poetry

The Color of Dust. 1970. Swallow Press

Riversongs. 1978. University of Illinois Press.[6]

The Sky at Ashland. 1986.

Selected Poems. 1994.

Natural Light. 1999.

Heat Lines. 2005. Asphodel Press.

Fiction

The Red Menace: A Fiction. 1984. Thunder's Mouth Press.[7]

Essays

In Plain Sight: Obsessions, Morals and Domestic Laughter. 1991. Moyer Bell.

“Messing about in Boats: A Plan B Essay.” Ploughshares. 2011. Volume 37, Number 4, Winter 2011. pp. 151-155.

“When Buffalo Became Buffalo.” Plume: Issue #67 February 2017.


External Links

Audio clip from Studs Terkel's radio show, discussing Red Menace

Library of Congress recording of Michael Anania and Mari Evans reading their poems

Poetry Foundation profile of Anania

Tri-Quarterly contributor's page

  1. Philip A. Greasley Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Volume 1: The Authors. 2001. Indiana University Press, pp. 34-35.
  2. Poetry Foundation. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/michael-anania
  3. UChicago Magazine. https://mag.uchicago.edu/university-news/university-obituaries-1#
  4. University of Chicago Library. 2008. Guide to the Michael Anania Papers circa 1950s-2006 https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.ANANIA
  5. Michael A. Antonucci and Garin Cycholl, Valley Voices: A Literary Review. A Special Issue on Michael Anania. 2016. Mississippi Valley State University.
  6. Waterman, Andrew. Stanley Kunitz and Michael Anania (Book Review). PN Review; Manchester Vol. 7, Iss. 4, (Jan 1, 1980): 50.
  7. John Matthias, “Reading Old Friends, Cont’d,” Southern Review. 1987 Jan 1, 1987; 23, 1;206-223.