C. D. Wright (born 1949) is a U.S. poet.
Carolyn D. Wright was born in Mountain Home, Arkansas to a chancery judge and a court reporter. She earned a BA from Memphis State College (now the University of Memphis) in 1971 and an MFA from the University of Arkansas in 1976. In 1979, she took a position at the San Francisco State University Poetry Center, which exposed her to many of the leading proponents of language poetry. Wright's work is influenced by many of the language poets, particularly Ron Silliman, but she found herself put off by what she has described as their "collective snobbishness" and overly theoretical stance. In 1983 she moved to Providence, Rhode Island to teach writing at Brown University, where she is Israel J. Kapstein Professor of English.
Wright's early poetry was often narrative, but her later work has become increasingly experimental. Her poetry is strongly rooted in a sense of place and regional voices, particularly those of Rhode Island and the Ozarks. She has published literary maps of both Rhode Island and Arkansas. Her first and second books, Room Rented by a Single Woman and Terrorism: Poems, were published by Frank Stanford 's Lost Roads Publishers. Wright and her husband, Forrest Gander , began running Lost Roads after Stanford's death in 1981. Wright's later work includes String Light; Deepstep Come Shining, a book-length poem; and One Big Self: Prisoners of Louisiana, a collaboration with photographer Deborah Luster . She has won several prestigious awards, including her appointment to the post of poet laureate of the state of Rhode Island in 1994, a Guggenheim fellowship, and, in 2004, a MacArthur Fellowship.
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