Rachel Tzvia Back is an English-language American-Israeli poet, translator and professor of literature.

Rachel Tzvia Back

Biography

edit

Born in Buffalo, New York, Rachel Tzvia Back was raised in the US and Israel. The seventh generation of her family in Israel, she returned to the country in 1980. She has lived in the Galilee, in the north of the country, since 2000. Back studied at Yale University, Temple University, and received her PhD from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is a professor of English literature and head of the graduate English track at Oranim Academic College.[1]

From 1995 to 2000, Back was the Israeli Academic and Administrative Director of the Wesleyan and Brown Universities Overseas Program in Israeli and Palestinian Studies, based in Jerusalem.

Literary career

edit

Back's most recent poetry collection, What Use is Poetry, the Poet is Asking, was published by Shearsman Books in March 2019.[2]

A noted and award-winning translator of Hebrew verse, Back translated of the poetry of Israeli poet Tuvia Ruebner in In the Illuminated Dark: Select Poems of Tuvia Ruebner (2015). Her translations of preeminent Hebrew poet Lea Goldberg in Lea Goldberg: Selected Poetry and Drama were awarded a PEN Translation Grant, and the collection On the Surface of Silence: The Last Poems of Lea Goldberg, was shortlisted for the TLS-Risa Domb/Porjes Award in 2019. Back was also the editor and primary translator of the English edition of the groundbreaking anthology With an Iron Pen: Twenty Years of Hebrew Protest Poetry, Night, Morning: Selected Poems of Hamutal Bar Yosef and work collected in The Defiant Muse: Hebrew Feminist Poetry from Antiquity to the Present (The Feminist Press, 1999) and Hebrew Writers on Writing (Trinity University Press, 2008).

In 2015, Back was a finalist for the National Literary Translation Award in Poetry and the National Jewish Book Award in Poetry for the collection In the Illuminated Dark: Selected Poems of Tuvia Ruebner. That same year, Back delivered the Stronach Lecture at the University of Berkeley California, an address titled: "'This Bequest of Wings': On Teaching Poetry in a Region of Conflict."

In 2002, Back's critical monograph Led by Language: the Poetry and Poetics of Susan Howe, was published by University of Alabama Press.

Grants & awards

edit

Works

edit

Poetry

Translations

Critical work

References

edit
  1. ^ "Rachel Tzvia Back". The Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2024-09-04.
  2. ^ "You are being redirected..." www.magersandquinn.com. Retrieved 2024-09-04.