Great River Reading Series: Athena Kildegaard

Presenter Information

Athena Kildegaard

Loading...

Media is loading
 

Location

Science Laboratory Center 120

Start Date

4-13-2023 5:00 PM

End Date

4-13-2023 6:00 PM

Presentation Type

Video

Description

On April 13th, poet Athena Kildegaard visited Winona State University as part of WSU’s John S. Lucas Great River Reading Series. Kildegaard read from her latest book, Prairie Midden, which grew out of research she did with primary sources such as school year books, diaries, letters written in response to government queries, county records and more, combined with research into the history of prairie settlement, the prairie ecosystem, and changes to agriculture, contributed to the poems in the book. Some of the poems imagine the voices of 16- or 17-year old daughters from 1836 to 2036. Others question the way in which we understand an ecosystem that is mostly disappeared. Still others sing out to that ecosystem and the variety of flora and fauna that lived there. Tess Taylor, poetry reviewer for NPR’s “All Things Considered,” says about Prairie Midden: “Part excavation, part elegy, this book enacts tenderness and calls for the recovery of a history and an ecosystem at once.”

Kildegaard writes poetry, libretti, essays, and stories. She is also the co-editor of Rocked by the Waters, an anthology of poems about motherhood. Her poems have appeared widely in many journals, including Prairie Schooner, Colorado Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, The American Journal of Poetry, North American Review and elsewhere. Her poems have been set to music by many composers, including Libby Larsen, Linda Kachelmeier, Mina Esary, Frank Horvat, and others. Athena’s poems have also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and read on the radio, and they have served as inspiration for painters and dancers. She lives in western Minnesota where she teaches at the University of Minnesota Morris and directs the honors program. More information is available at https://www.athenakildegaard.com/.

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.

ADDITIONAL EVENT AT THE MINNESOTA MARINE ART MUSEUM

In addition to Kildegaard’s reading at WSU, On April 14th, from noon to 1 PM, she will visited Winona’s Minnesota Marine Art Museum (MMAM) to read from her work and discuss how her latest book, Prairie Midden, engages with the history and ecology of the Minnesota prairie. Kildegaard’s presentation enters into dialogue with the MMAM’s current exhibition of works by artist Ian Hanesworth, Fragments of this Living Earth, which spans disciplines of printmaking, textiles, and poetry, and asserts the critical interconnectedness of human and ecological wellbeing. Thanks to a special grant from First Tuesday: The Laureate Writer’s Series and from the Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest, admission to this noon event is free.

wsuenggrrs_2023-Kildegaard Press Release.docx (3167 kB)
GRRS Press Release - Kildegaard

WSUENGGRRS_2023_Kildegaard_Athena-CC..png (416 kB)
Closed Caption File for Athena Kildegaard reading

Unique Identifier

WSUENGGRRS_2023_Kildegaard_Athena

Share

COinS
 
Apr 13th, 5:00 PM Apr 13th, 6:00 PM

Great River Reading Series: Athena Kildegaard

Science Laboratory Center 120

On April 13th, poet Athena Kildegaard visited Winona State University as part of WSU’s John S. Lucas Great River Reading Series. Kildegaard read from her latest book, Prairie Midden, which grew out of research she did with primary sources such as school year books, diaries, letters written in response to government queries, county records and more, combined with research into the history of prairie settlement, the prairie ecosystem, and changes to agriculture, contributed to the poems in the book. Some of the poems imagine the voices of 16- or 17-year old daughters from 1836 to 2036. Others question the way in which we understand an ecosystem that is mostly disappeared. Still others sing out to that ecosystem and the variety of flora and fauna that lived there. Tess Taylor, poetry reviewer for NPR’s “All Things Considered,” says about Prairie Midden: “Part excavation, part elegy, this book enacts tenderness and calls for the recovery of a history and an ecosystem at once.”

Kildegaard writes poetry, libretti, essays, and stories. She is also the co-editor of Rocked by the Waters, an anthology of poems about motherhood. Her poems have appeared widely in many journals, including Prairie Schooner, Colorado Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, The American Journal of Poetry, North American Review and elsewhere. Her poems have been set to music by many composers, including Libby Larsen, Linda Kachelmeier, Mina Esary, Frank Horvat, and others. Athena’s poems have also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and read on the radio, and they have served as inspiration for painters and dancers. She lives in western Minnesota where she teaches at the University of Minnesota Morris and directs the honors program. More information is available at https://www.athenakildegaard.com/.

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.

ADDITIONAL EVENT AT THE MINNESOTA MARINE ART MUSEUM

In addition to Kildegaard’s reading at WSU, On April 14th, from noon to 1 PM, she will visited Winona’s Minnesota Marine Art Museum (MMAM) to read from her work and discuss how her latest book, Prairie Midden, engages with the history and ecology of the Minnesota prairie. Kildegaard’s presentation enters into dialogue with the MMAM’s current exhibition of works by artist Ian Hanesworth, Fragments of this Living Earth, which spans disciplines of printmaking, textiles, and poetry, and asserts the critical interconnectedness of human and ecological wellbeing. Thanks to a special grant from First Tuesday: The Laureate Writer’s Series and from the Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest, admission to this noon event is free.