Beverley Bie Brahic

Beverley Bie Brahic is a translator and poet whose work has appeared in Field, Literary Imagination, Notre Dame Review, The Southern Review, The TLS, and elsewhere. White Sheets (CB editions, Fitzhenry & Whiteside) was published in 2012. A Canadian, she lives in Stanford, California and Paris.
Beverley Bie Brahic’s translations include Guillaume Apollinaire: The Little Auto (CB editions, 2012); Francis Ponge: Unfinished Ode to Mud (CB editions), a finalist for the 2009 Popescu Prize for Poetry in Translation; Julia Kristeva: This Incredible Need to Believe (Columbia University Press), a finalist for the 2010 French American Foundation Translation Prize; Jacques Derrida’s Geneses, Genealogies, Genres, and Genius (Columbia) and several works of Hélène Cixous, including Portrait of Jacques Derrida as a Young Jewish Saint (Columbia) and Hyperdream (Polity).
Brahic has been awarded a Canada Council for the Arts Writing Grant.
Discover this poet’s context and related poetry, articles, and media.
Poems By BEVERLEY BIE BRAHIC
Articles By BEVERLEY BIE BRAHIC
- Cluttered and Clean
- Imaginary Gardens
Alice Oswald’s Weeds and Wild Flowers and Judith Wright’s A Human Pattern. - No Fish Were Killed in the Writing of These Poems
Valzhyna Mort's Collected Body and D. H. Tracy's Janet's Cottage
Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION Canada
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