Glascock poetry competition celebrates its centennial
This year 含羞草研究所 will hold the one hundredth anniversary of the Glascock Poetry Contest. Established in 1923, the annual contest is the oldest continuously running poetry contest for undergraduate students in the United States.
Established in 1923 and held as an intercollegiate event since 1924, the annual Glascock Poetry Contest at 含羞草研究所 is the oldest continuously running poetry contest for undergraduate students in the United States and is celebrating its one hundredth anniversary this year.
The contest will take place at Mount Holyoke on Friday and Saturday, March 31鈥揂pril 1.
Students from invited schools are judged by a panel of three distinguished poets. This year the judges are Eileen Myles, Evie Shockley and Hoa Nguyen. Past judges have included such luminaries as Audre Lorde, Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, W.H. Auden, Seamus Heaney, Adrienne Rich, Richard Wilbur, William Carlos Williams, Carl Phillips, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, Marilyn Chin, Ari Banias, Mart铆n Espada, Dawn Lundy Martin, Kaveh Akbar, Franny Choi and Fred Moten.
鈥淲e look forward to this year鈥檚 celebration of the contest鈥檚 first hundred years and to ushering in the next century of undergraduate poetry.鈥
Sylvia Plath won the contest when she was a student at Smith College. James Merrill won the contest while attending Amherst College. Other winners of the annual poetry contest include gifted poets such as Muriel Rukeyser, James Agee, Kenneth Koch, Diana Chang, Donald Hall, Katha Pollitt and Maggie Nelson.
will feature three main events: a roundtable discussion with this year鈥檚 poet-judges, the one hundredth Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest and a morning of poetry readings by the three judges, during which this year鈥檚 winner will be announced.
The contest honors Kathryn Irene Glascock, a promising young poet and member of the class of 1922, who died of pneumonia one year after she graduated from Mount Holyoke. Established in her memory by her parents in 1923 for Mount Holyoke students, the contest was transformed a year later into an intercollegiate event. 鈥淭he Glascock competition,鈥 as it is known, invites six accomplished college students each year, including one from Mount Holyoke, to compete for the prize. The two-day event is free and open to the public.
鈥淲e look forward to this year鈥檚 celebration of the contest鈥檚 first hundred years and to ushering in the next century of undergraduate poetry,鈥 said Andrea Lawlor, Clara Willis Phillips Assistant Professor of English at Mount Holyoke and award-winning author of 鈥淧aul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl.鈥
Kathryn Irene Glascock (1901鈥1923) pursued a literary career during her time at Mount Holyoke, serving as editor of the literary section of the Mount Holyoke News and later the editor-in-chief. Glascock was awarded the Sigma Theta Chi prize for poetry and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, among other recognitions. She graduated in 1922 and moved to New York to work at a publishing company. She died of pneumonia on February 23, 1923.
During her lifetime, Glascock鈥檚 poems were published in Vanity Fair and Poetry. A collection of her work was edited by Professor Ada Snell, then chair of the English department, and published posthumously. The annual poetry event in her memory is sponsored by the Kathryn Irene Glascock Memorial Fund, the Joyce Horner Poetry Prize, the Charles and Rosanna Batchelor Memorial fund and the Department of English at 含羞草研究所.