
Diane Rainson '00 will represent Mount Holyoke at MHC's prestigious
Kathryn Irene Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Competition, to be held
at the College April 14 and 15.
Diane Rainson '00 will
represent Mount Holyoke at MHC's prestigious Kathryn Irene Glascock
Intercollegiate Poetry Competition, to be held at the College April
14 and 15. The MHC community is welcome to attend all Glascock
events. The seventh Francis Perkins
scholar to participate in the event in the past decade, Rainson will
compete against contestants from Carleton College, Hampshire College,
New York University, St. John's College, and Yale University.
Competitors will read their work on Friday, April 14, at 8 pm in
Gamble Auditorium before a panel of professional poets. This year's panelists are
John Burt, Rachel Hadas, and Margaret Holley. Prior to the Friday
evening event, the poet-judges will lead a "Life and Letters"
conversation at 3 pm in the library's Stimson Room. They will read
from their own work on Saturday at 10:30 am in the New York Room,
Mary Woolley Hall. Rainson is a Long Island
native who spent two years at Nassau Community College before
transferring to MHC in 1998. While a student at Nassau, Rainson began
writing poetry in a creative writing class taught by Kathryn A.
Schwertman '77. Last year, Rainson was an alternate for the Glascock
event, which Erika Dyson '99 won. Dyson, a religion major and Frances
Perkins Scholar, was the first MHC student to win the event in
twenty-one years. Rainson, an English major
with a special interest is nineteenth-century Romantic poetry and a
minor in religion, is delighted to have an opportunity to compete in
this year's event. She credits professors Mary Jo Salter and Virginia
Ellis, her thesis coadvisers, with nurturing her poetry talents at
MHC. Rainson has also been involved in "some intense literary theory
work with Richard Johnson" and notes that the experience has given
her "a broad field of reference in which to explore [her] own
ideas, both in prose and in poetry." "What I love about Diane's
poetry," says Salter, "is how self-demanding it is, and on how many
levels. Many of her poems employ symbols borrowed from the Bible, but
she always reinvents them and makes them contemporary. Her vocabulary
is exceptional, and the range of forms she tries out--including
imitations of Chaucer--is very wide. You can also read Diane for the
complex texture of sounds she produces. I have high hopes for her
future." Kay Althoff, director of the
Frances Perkins program, echoes Salter's enthusiasm: "From the first
time we read Diane's application, we saw real talent. She was a top
student at Nassau Community College. We anticipated she might emerge
this year as the Glascock representative." The Glascock competition, now
in its seventy-seventh year, has involved such literary luminaries as
Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, James Merrill, and William Kunstler.
This year's panelists, Burt, Hadas, and Holley, will continue the
event's distinguished legacy. John Burt, professor of English and
American literature at Brandeis University, is the author of two
books of poems, most recently Work Without Hope (1996). He has
also published a critical study of Robert Penn Warren and edited a
volume of Warren's Collected Poems. Rachel Hadas's numerous
volumes of verse, translations, and criticism include Halfway Down
the Hall: New and Selected Poems (1998). Hadas was elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1995 and is a professor of
English at Rutgers University. Margaret Holley directs the
creative writing program at Bryn Mawr College and is the author of
three poetry collections, including The Smoke Tree, which won
the Bluestem Award. She has also published a book of criticism on
Marianne Moore. Matins