Joanne Kyger
Photo: Donald GuravichAssociated with the poets of the San Francisco Renaissance, poet Joanne Kyger studied philosophy and literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara, moving to San Francisco in 1957 just before she finished her degree. In San Francisco she attended the Sunday meetings of poets Jack Spicer and Robert Duncan, and moved into the East West House, a communal house for students of Zen Buddhism and Asian studies. She lived in Japan with Gary Snyder, her husband at the time, and traveled in India with Snyder, Allen Ginsberg, and Peter Orlovsky. She eventually returned to California, where she still lives.
Kyger has published more than 20 collections of poetry, including The Tapestry and the Web (1965), All This Every Day (1975), The Wonderful Focus of You (1979), Going On: Selected Poems 1958-1980 (1983), Just Space, poems 1979-1989 (1991), Again: Poems 1989-2000 (2001), As Ever: Selected Poems (2002), and About Now: Collected Poems (2007). She is also the author of the prose collection Strange Big Moon: Japan and India Journals 1960-1964 (1981).
Influenced by her study of Zen Buddhism as well as the Black Mountain School and San Francisco poets, Kyger’s work is mindful of daily events and the northern California landscape; her poems frequently use form and shape as organic outgrowths of their subject matter. Poet Alice Notley has referred to Kyger as a phenomenologist, while Dale Smith, reviewing As Ever, noted “the distinctions between self, body and landscape, and God and domestic gods of place blend into the vibrant fabric of every day” in her work.
Kyger lives in Bolinas, California and occasionally teaches at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the Naropa Institute in Colorado.
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Poems By JOANNE KYGER
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The Healing Power of Poetry
Jennifer Nix discusses how the poet Joanne Kyger helped her feel less lonely during a serious illness.
Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION U.S., Western
LIFE SPAN 1934–
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