Kim Roberts

Kim Roberts (born November 7, 1961) is an American poet, editor, and literary historian who lives in Washington, D.C.

Kim Roberts
Kim Roberts reading at Literary Hill Book fest, 2017
Born (1961-11-07) November 7, 1961
Charlotte, North Carolina
United States
Occupationpoet, editor, essayist
NationalityAmerican
EducationEmerson College;
University of Arizona

Life

Roberts was born November 7, 1961, in Charlotte, North Carolina. She received a BFA from Emerson College and an MFA from the University of Arizona.

She is the founder of Beltway Poetry Quarterly,[1][2] editor of the anthology Full Moon On K Street: Poems About Washington DC (Plan B Press, 2010),[3] and author of five books of poetry including, The Scientific Method (WordTech Editions), Fortune's Favor: Scott In Antarctica (Poetry Mutual Press), and Animal Magnetism (Pearl Editions). Her work has been published in numerous anthologies and literary journals throughout the US, and internationally.[4] The Kimnama is a book-length poem that chronicles her experiences during a period of residence in India.[5] Fortune's Favor: Scott In Antarctica is a book-length poem based on the journals of British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, whose Terra Nova Expedition was the second to reach the South Pole in 1912.[6]

Roberts has seen her work adapted to music by Arc of Ones, as well as by classical composer Daron Aric Hagen.[7] Several poems have been choreographed by Jane Franklin Dance Company and performed at various venues including the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage.[8] Roberts' science and poetry workshops at the 2017 March for Science were featured in The New York Times Opinion page [9] and the title poem of her book The Scientific Method was included at the march as part of "Science Stanzas," sponsored by the Wick Poetry Center at Kent State University.[10]

Washington, D.C. is the source of much inspiration for Roberts. She has developed numerous tours for schools, community groups, and Big Read celebrations highlighting the literary and cultural history of the city. Roberts frequently leads walking tours of the Harlem Renaissance-era writers in the greater U Street neighborhood.[11] Roberts's research on Walt Whitman's decade in residence of Washington, DC was featured in The Walt Whitman Quarterly Review, as well as being referenced in subsequent articles in The Washington Post and The Washington Times, features on radio essays on stations WAMU and WPFW, and on panels for Whitman conferences at Rutgers University, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and at the annual Washington Historical Studies Conference. Roberts was the Coordinator of the city-wide festival in 2005, "DC Celebrates Whitman: 150 Years of Leaves of Grass." Roberts has presented "The Rise of DC's Black Intelligentsia: Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Dunbar-Nelson in LeDroit Park" and "Henry Adams in Lafayette Square" at DC Historical Studies Conferences.[12][13] Her projects have been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, The Humanities Council of Washington, DC, the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities,[14] and the District of Columbia Public Library.

Awards

Roberts is the winner of the 2009 Pearl Poetry Prize for her manuscript, Animal Magnetism.[15] In 2010, she won the Washington Online Award for "Contributions to the DC Literary Community." In 2008, she was awarded an Independent Voice Award from the Capital BookFest.[16] Roberts is the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and the Humanities Council of Washington.[17] She has been awarded writer's residencies at seventeen artist colonies across the United States, including the Science Museum of Minnesota,[18] the Edward Albee Foundation,[19] and the Luna Parc Atelier Foundation.

Bibliography

Poetry

  • The Scientific Method. (WordTech Editions). 2017. ISBN 978-1625492166.
  • Fortune's Favor: Scott In Antarctica. (Poetry Mutual Press). 2015. ISBN 978-1-329-00621-8.
  • Animal Magnetism Pearl Editions, 2011, ISBN 9781888219388
  • Full Moon On K Street: Poems About Washington, DC. (Plan B Press). 2010. ISBN 978-0-9778243-6-6.website
  • The Kimnama. (Poetry Mutual Press/Vrzhu Press). 2007. ISBN 978-1-4303-1407-3.
  • The Wishbone Galaxy. (Washington Writers Publishing House). 1994. ISBN 978-0-931846-45-8.

Plays

  • The Distressway (2006)
  • I'll Give You Flowers (2006)
  • Dave's Birthday (2001)
  • The Language of Love: An Exploration of the Alphabet in Twenty-Six Parts (1997)
  • America (1995)
  • Sex and the Symbol Woman with Kathy Keler (1992)

Non-fiction

  • Lip Smack: A History of Spoken Word Poetry in DC (2010)

Tours and web exhibits

  • DC Writers' Homes, co-editor with Dan Vera (2011)
  • Henry Adams in Lafayette Square (2011)
  • Wide Enough for Our Ambition: DC's Segregated African American Schools (1807-1954) (2010)
  • New Deal Washington (2009)
  • Jazz Age Stories of the Rich & Scandalous! (2008)
  • Zora Neale Hurston's Washington (2007)
  • Mid-Atlantic Medical Museums, Academic Internal Medicine Insight (2006)
  • The Harlem Renaissance in D.C. (2005)[20]
  • Whitman In DC: Gay DC Walking Tours Co-written with Martin G. Murray (2005)
  • WALKArlington in Rosslyn Walking Tour (2004)

Special projects

gollark: Consider a question like "Israel or Palestine?".
gollark: You connect it with a *good* thing and it somehow seems better.
gollark: You connect a thing with a bad thing somehow, and people think it's bad.
gollark: It processes horribly fuzzily.
gollark: I was mostly talking about political campaigning, however. We would of course have to disguise their faces and voices.

References

  1. "Staff, Partners, & Volunteers". Beltway Poetry Quarterly.
  2. "beltwayflash2005". washingtonart.com.
  3. "Featured Products". Plan B Press.
  4. "Kim Roberts - Poet. Editor. Literary Historian".
  5. "Scene4 Magazine: Interview with Kim Roberts - Kathi Wolfe". www.scene4.com.
  6. "The Literary Hill" column, Hillrag Magazine, May 2015, page 102. http://issuu.com/capitalcommunitynews/docs/hillrag-magazine-may-2015/100
  7. "DRAM". www.dramonline.org.
  8. "Jane Franklin Dance Newsletter". janefranklin.com.
  9. "Making Art at the March for Science," by Anna North, The New York Times, April 23, 2017 https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/23/opinion/making-art-at-the-march-for-science.html
  10. "Science Stanzas: The March for Science › The Scientific Method: Chemistry Laboratory".
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-22. Retrieved 2015-05-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. "CONFERENCE SCHEDULE". 24 October 2011.
  13. Leslie. "Guest in Progress: Kim Roberts".
  14. "Jazz Age Stories of the Rich and Scandalous". Issuu.
  15. "Pearl". www.pearlmag.com.
  16. "Login". www.sojournals.com.
  17. "Artist at Pine Needles". Science Museum of Minnesota.
  18. "Former Fellows 2011". The Edward F. Albee Foundation.
  19. "Split This Rock--The Historical & the Moving (THE DRESSING)". www.scene4.com.
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