Trichome

Marcia Ann Southwick (October 30, 1949 – ) is an American poet and University instructor who has received numerous awards and honors for her poetry and teaching.

Biography

[edit]

Marcia Southwick was born on October 30, 1949, in Boston, Massachusetts, daughter of Wayne Orin (father) and Jessie Ann Southwick (mother).[citation needed] After graduating from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop with an M.F.A. in 1975,[1] Southwick married the poet Larry Levis on March 15, 1975, with fellow poet David St. John serving as best man.

Eventually, Levis and Southwick lived in Columbia, Missouri, where they both taught at the University of Missouri, and together were founding editors of The Missouri Review.[2] The couple had a child, Nicholas Southwick Levis, who was born in 1978.[3] In 1981, they moved back to Iowa where they both taught in the M.F.A program as visiting poets for two years. The couple divorced in the early 1980s.

Southwick later moved to Lincoln, Nebraska, where she taught at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.[4] In 1992, she met and married Murray Gell-Mann, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist,[5] and moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico. Southwick would go on to teach for many years as a Visiting Poet at the University of New Mexico. Her son Nicholas would become Gell-Mann's stepson.[5]

Southwick's volumes of poetry include A Saturday Night at the Flying Dog which won the Field Prize from Oberlin College Press.

Selected bibliography

[edit]
Poetry books
Editor
  • Extended Outlooks: The Iowa Review Collection of Contemporary Women Writers. Edited with Jane Cooper, Gwen Head, and Adalaide Morris. New York: Macmillan, 1982.

Awards and honors

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Marcia Southwick: Bio and Bibliography - Xavier Literary Reading Series". Archived from the original on 2022-05-28.
  2. ^ "Nebraska Center for Writers (NCW)--Marcia Southwick page". Archived from the original on 1998-01-15.
  3. ^ St. John, David (February 3, 2016). "Best Man: David St. John on Larry Levis's Wedding". Graywolf Press. Archived from the original on 2016-03-10.
  4. ^ "Nebraska Center for Writers (NCW)--Marcia Southwick page". Archived from the original on 1998-01-15.
  5. ^ a b Johnson, George (May 24, 2019). "Murray Gell-Mann, Who Peered at Particles and Saw the Universe, Dies at 89". Obituaries. The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on May 25, 2019. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c Southwick, Marcia, "Two Poems: The Ruins, The Sun Speaks", American Poetry Review (May/June 1988), 17 (3): 33, JSTOR 27779420
  7. ^ a b c d e "Marcia Southwick | Nebraska Authors". nebraskaauthors.org.
  8. ^ "The Oberlin Review \\ Arts Article". www2.oberlin.edu.

Leave a Reply