Patience Agbabi
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox person Patience Agbabi FRSL (born 1965) is a British poet and performer who emphasizes the spoken word.<ref name=BC>Template:British council.</ref> Although her poetry addresses contemporary themes, it often makes use of formal constraints, including traditional poetic forms. She has described herself as "bicultural" and bisexual.<ref name="vyoung">Template:Cite web</ref> Issues of racial and gender identity feature in her poetry. She is celebrated "for paying equal homage to literature and performance" and for work that "moves fluidly and nimbly between cultures, dialects, voices; between page and stage."<ref name="Patience-Agbabi-Poetry-Foundation">Template:Cite web</ref> In 2017, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.<ref>"Patience Agbabi" at The Royal Society of Literature.</ref>
Early life and education
Patience Agbabi was born in London to Nigerian parents.<ref name=BC /> From a young age, she was privately fostered by a white English family and moved at the age of 12 from Sussex to North Wales, where she was then raised in Colwyn Bay.<ref>"Patience Agbabi |Crossing Borders: From Page to Stage and Back Again"Template:Dead link, Writers on Writing, British Council.</ref> She studied English language and literature at Pembroke College, Oxford.
She earned an MA in Creative Writing, the Arts and Education from the University of Sussex in 2002, and in September that year was appointed Associate Creative Writing Lecturer at the University of Wales, Cardiff.<ref>Patience Agbabi Template:Webarchive at Literary Festivals UK.</ref>
Poetry and performances
Agbabi began performing on the London club circuit in 1995 as a member of the performance group Atomic Lip, which was once described as "poetry's first pop group."<ref>Cited by British Council [1]</ref> Their final tour occurred in 1998, titled "Quadrophonix," which mixed live and video performance in each show. In 1996, she worked on a performance piece called FO(U)R WOMEN, with Adeola Agbebiyi and Dorothea Smartt, first performed at the Institute of Contemporary Arts and touring from 1995 to 1998.<ref>Stephanie Everett, "Patience Agbabi", Aesthetica.</ref><ref name="Poetry International">Template:Cite web</ref> She has cited among her influences Janis Joplin, Carol Ann Duffy, Chaucer, and various aspects of contemporary music and culture. Agbabi's childhood love of cake is apparent in her poem "Eat Me".
The poems in her first book R.A.W., published in 1995, focus on her experiences regarding Thatcherism, urban life, and racial and sexual politics.<ref name="Poetry International" /> The style of these poems "owe much to the rhythms, verbal and associational genius of rap".<ref>George Stade, Karen Karbiener (eds), "Agbabi, Patience (1965– )", Encyclopedia of British Writers, 1800 to the Present, Volume 2, Fact On File, 2009, p. 8.</ref> Her next collection was Transformatrix (2000), a commentary on contemporary Britain that draws inspiration from popular music forms. "Transformatix" also contains Agbabi's first published adaptation of Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, reimagining the Wife of Bath as the Nigerian "Mrs. Alice Ebi Bafa".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2008, Agbabi published Bloodshot Monochrome, a collection that, as described by one reviewer, highlights social and political issues, captures and considers moments in time through long-dead authors, and offers readers a diverse sampling of the author's views of life in a variety of places."<ref>J. J. Furman, "Bloodshot Monochrome", Women Writing London, 29 July 2013.</ref> Carol Rumens has said: "Agbabi characteristically makes poetry an opportunity for conversation with the past, not swamping it but setting new lexical terms."<ref>Carol Rumens, "Poem of the week: Skins by Patience Agbabi", The Guardian, 28 March 2016.</ref>
As Canterbury Laureate from July 2009 to December 2010, Agbabi received an Arts Council grant to write a full-length poetry collection based on Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.<ref>Patience Agbabi, "About", Telling Tales website.</ref> The final product was published in 2014 as Telling Tales, which retold each tale in the Middle-English work to offer a 21st-century take on the characters, its poetry and its performance elements.<ref>"from Telling Tales Prologue (Grime Mix)", The Poetry Society, 2014.</ref> The reinterpretation used her critically acclaimed, lyrical poetic style to newly define British literary traditions. The book met with praise from poets including Simon Armitage, who described it as "the liveliest versions of Chaucer you're likely to read."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Agbabi continues to tour Telling Tales as a performance-poetry production shown at literature festivals, arts spaces and libraries across the UK. She performed tales such as "The Wife of Bafa" or "Tit for Tat (Reeves's tale)".
As well as performing in Britain, Agbabi undertook British Council reading tours of Namibia, the Czech Republic, Zimbabwe, Germany and Switzerland. She took part in Modern Love, a spoken-word tour produced by Renaissance One, which explored love and modern relationships, touring the UK and Switzerland.
Her poetry has featured on television and radio, including the Channel 4 series Litpop in 1998 and on the children's programme Blue Peter in 1999. She has also been a contributor to several anthologies, among them Jubilee Lines (2012), edited by Carol Ann Duffy, which marked Queen Elizabeth II's 60th anniversary on the throne,<ref>Anna Aslanyan, "Jubilee Lines: British poets mark queen's 60th year on throne", The National, 2 June 2012.</ref> and Refugee Tales (2016), a collection of stories based on accounts by Gatwick airport detainees.<ref>Alison Flood, "Canterbury Tales rebooted with refugee stories of trafficking and detention", The Guardian, 13 June 2016.</ref><ref>Jess Denham, "Refugee Tales: Modern reboot of The Canterbury Tales to tell harrowing refugee stories", The Independent, 14 June 2016.</ref>
She has taught and run workshops and also been poet-in-residence at various places, ranging from Oxford Brookes University and Eton College to a London tattoo and piercing studio.<ref>Charlotte Runcie, "Patience Agbabi: Chaucer remixed", The Telegraph, 27 April 2014.</ref>
In 2018, she was writer in residence at the Brontë Parsonage Museum.<ref>"Patience Agbabi" Template:Webarchive, The Brontë Society.</ref>
Awards and recognition
In 1997, Agbabi's first poetry collection, R.A.W (1995), received the Excelle Literary Award.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2000, she was one of 10 poets commissioned by BBC Radio 4 to write a poem for National Poetry Day.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2004, she featured on the Poetry Book Society list of Next Generation poets.<ref>"Patience Agbabi: 'Most poets are not just poets'", BBC News, 11 September 2014.</ref><ref>"Patience Agbabi", Poems. The Poetry Society.</ref>
In 2010, Agbabi was appointed as the Canterbury Festival's Canterbury Poet Laureate.<ref>Alison Flood, "Funky Chaucer reboot by Patience Agbabi due for April launch", The Guardian, 23 January 2014.</ref><ref>"Poetry Thursday - Chunnel/Le Tunnel sous la Manche by Patience Agbabi |Biographical note", margaret-cooter, 2 April 2015.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In March 2015, The Poetry Society announced Agbabi as one of five poets shortlisted for the 2014 Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry, for her book Telling Tales.<ref>2014 Shortlist, Ted Hughes Award, The Poetry Society.</ref>
In 2017, Agbabi was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.<ref>Natasha Onwuemezi,
"Rankin, McDermid and Levy named new RSL fellows", The Bookseller, 7 June 2017.</ref>
Selected works
- R.A.W., Gecko Press (1995).
- Transformatrix,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Canongate Books (2000)
- Bloodshot Monochrome,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Canongate (2008)
- Telling Tales,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Canongate (2014)
- The Wife of Bafa (text);<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Analysis of The Wife of Bafa<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- The Infinite, Canongate (2020)
Anthologies
- Carol Ann Duffy, ed., Jubilee Lines (London: Faber & Faber, 2012)
- Sasha Dugdale, ed., Best British Poetry 2012 (Cromer: Salt, 2012)
- Helen Ivory, ed., In Their Own Words (Cromer: Salt, 2012)
- Rob Pope, ed., Studying English Language and Literature: An Introduction and Companion (Oxford: Routledge, 2012)
- Tom Chivers, Adventures in Form (London: Penned in the Margins, 2012)
- Refugee Tales (Manchester: Comma Press, 2016)
- Margaret Busby, ed., New Daughters of Africa (Myriad Editions, 2019)
Further reading
- Charlotte Runcie (2014): "Patience Agbabi: Chaucer remixed. The poet Patience Agbabi tells Charlotte Runcie why she has updated the Canterbury Tales", The Telegraph, 27 April 2014
- Alison Flood (2014): "Funky Chaucer reboot by Patience Agbabi due for April launch", The Guardian, 23 January 2014
- Lee M. Jenkins (2011): "Interculturalism: Imtiaz Dharker, Patience Agbabi, Jackie Kay and contemporary Irish poets", Chapter 8 in: The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century British and Irish Women's Poetry, Template:ISBN, pp. 119–135.
- Alex Goody (2010): "Contemporary British poetry", in: The Cambridge Companion to Modern British Culture, Template:ISBN, pp. 137–153.
References
External links
- Template:British Council
- Patience Agbabi, Telling Tales, 24 June 2015
- Patience Agbabi at GreenBelt
- Reader comments on Bloodshot Monochrome, Goodreads
- Nisha Obano, "Patience Agbabi" Template:Webarchive, Encyclopedia of Afro-European Studies
- Eat Me Poem Analysis and Commentary, Interpreture
- Patience Agbabi on BBC Radio 4 Front Row
- Patience Agbabi reading "1994 |Chunnel / Le Tunnel sous la Manche", FaberBooks at SoundCloud.
- Living people
- 1965 births
- 20th-century British poets
- 20th-century English women writers
- 21st-century British poets
- 21st-century English women writers
- Academics of the University of Wales
- Alumni of Pembroke College, Oxford
- Alumni of the University of Sussex
- Bisexual academics
- Bisexual women writers
- Bisexual poets
- Black British women writers
- Black British writers
- English women poets
- English people of Nigerian descent
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- Black British LGBTQ people
- English LGBTQ poets
- British bisexual women
- English bisexual writers