Poet, author, and educator Rita Dove
is the nation's first Black United States Poet Laureate, although some
historians would give that distinction to Robert Hayden. However, Dove
is the first to hold what was previously known as the Consultant in
Poetry to the Library of Congress position before it was changed to its
current Poet Laureate designation in 1986.
Dove
was born August 28, 1952 and was raised in Ohio. Her father, Ray Dove,
was one of the first Black chemists to work in the tire industry. With
the support of her parents, Dove excelled in high school and was named a
Presidential Scholar attending Miami University in Ohio as a National
Merit Scholar.
After
leaving the school in 1973, she was awarded a Fulbright scholarship to
study at West Germany's University of Tübingen. She earned her MFA from
the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa, where she met her
husband, German writer Fred Viebahn.
The first of Dove's collections was published in 1980, titled The Yellow House On The Corner. In 1987, Dove won a Pulitzer for Poetry, most specifically for her 1986 verse-novel work, Thomas and Beulah.
African-American
poet Robert Hayden was the Consultant in Poetry to the Library of
Congress from 1976-1978. Gwendolyn Brooks had the distinction in
1985-1986 but when the honor's title was changed to Poet Laureate in
1986, it meant that Dove was officially the first African-American Poet
Laureate, serving from 1993 to 1995.
Dove is currently the Commonwealth Professor at the University of Virginia's Department of English in Charlottesville.
Image from Wikipadia.
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