Jennifer Moxley
Moxley’s poems combine lyric and innovative looks at daily life while interrogating societal comfort. Reviewing Clampdown for the Nation, poet Ange Mlinko noted, “Moxley's ethical anxieties emanate from a central unease, unease at home, and ripple out to touch nation, earth and cosmos. But … Moxley does not sublimate her psychology and social perspective.” “Truth in my work is just that: a question,” asserted Moxley in an interview with Noah Eli Gordon for the Denver Quarterly. “I am a poet because language, especially as it lives in poetry, approximates my idea of truth in a more satisfying and meaningful way than any other human production or activity.”
Moxley is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including Imagination Verses (1996), Often Capital (2005), The Line (2007), and Clampdown (2009), as well as the memoir The Middle Room (2007). A noted translator, Moxley has translated Jacqueline Risset’s collections of poetry, The Translation Begins (1996), and essays, Sleep’s Powers (2008), as well as Anne Portugal’s Absolute bob (2010).
Moxley has won the Denver Quarterly’s Linda Hull Award, and her work has been included in the anthologies Best American Poetry (2002), Vanishing Points: New Modernist Poems (2004), and American Hybrid: A Norton Anthology of New Poetry (2009).
Moxley has served as poetry editor for The Baffler, a contributing editor for The Poker, and a founding editor of The Impercipient and The Impercipient Lecture Series. Since 2001, she has taught at the University of Maine.
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Audio & Podcasts
Poem Talk-
Find the Missing Line: A Discussion of Jennifer Moxley's "The Atrophy of Private Life"
Hosted by Al Filreis and featuring Katie Price, Cathy Eisenhower, and Christopher Schmidt.
Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION U.S., New England
LIFE SPAN 1964–
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