Enid Dame (June 28, 1943, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania – December 25, 2003) was an American poet, fiction writer, teacher, editor, and publisher.[1][2][3] For many years, she and her husband, poet Donald Lev, lived in Brooklyn and in High Falls, New York, where they edited and published the literary tabloid Home Planet News. She was on the faculty of the New Jersey Institute of Technology and Rutgers University in New Brunswick, where she served as Associate Director of the Writing Program.
Dame's poems explored themes of urban life, Jewish history and identity, and political activism. She examined contemporary women's lives in persona poems that take on the voice of Eve, Lilith, or other woman from Jewish tradition. These poems often locate a kernel of feminist rebellion in familiar Biblical stories. The 2007 anthology Broken Land: Poems of Brooklyn, edited by Julia Kasdorf and Michael Tyrell, was dedicated to her memory.[4]
Her works
edit- Riding the D Train
- On the Road to Damascus, Maryland
- Lilith[5]
- Lilith's New Career
- Lilith and Her Demons
- Dream Wedding
- Anything You Don't See
Further reading
edit- Poets on the Psalms featuring Enid Dame. Edited by Lynn Domina (Trinity University Press, 2008).
References
editExternal links
edit- Honoring Enid Dame at Rutgers
- In Memorial to Enid Dame
- Poets Enid Dame and Donald Lev
- Enid Dame Poems
- Enid Dame videotaped reading Lilith on YouTube
- "Enid Dame's Householdry" by Burt Kimmelman, in Rain Taxi (Summer 2009)