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Y.O. Speaker Series: Poet Nicholas Gulig

Recent Poet Laureate of Wisconsin, Nicholas Gulig, comes for a discussion of his vibrant life, the PBS Wisconsin documentary Welcome Poets of which he’s the subject, and a reading of some of his transformative poems on Thursday, June 4th at 6pm. We’ll screen the film at no cost before the paid program. The film will be shown for free from 6pm to 7pm. The paid program with Nicholas will begin at 7pm. Adults 19 and over: $25. Youth 18 and under: $15. Welcome, Nicholas!

From the Academy of American Poets: “Nicholas Gulig is a Thai-American poet from Eau Claire, Wisconsin. He is the author of the books Orient (winner of the 2017 CSU Poetry Center Open Book Competition), Book of Lake, and North of Order. In 2011, Gulig was the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to Bangkok. He is also a recipient of the Ruskin Art Club Poetry Award, the Black Warrior Review Poetry Prize, and the Grist’s ProForma Award. Nicholas is an associate professor of languages and literatures at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater and lives in Fort Atkinson. In 2023, he received an Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellowship and was also was appointed Poet Laureate of Wisconsin through 2024.”

From PBS Wisconsin, describing its groundbreaking new documentary Welcome Poets:  “Former Wisconsin Poet Laureate Nicholas Gulig presents a lyrical reflection on his return to Wisconsin adjoined to the literary echoes of Fort Atkinson’s famed 20th century poet Lorine Niedecker (1903–1970). Welcome Poets connects the shared and divergent landscapes, personal histories and poetry of both writers — exploring themes of place and displacement, nature and culture, alienation and belonging. Gulig retraces the terrain of his childhood and coming of age as a Thai American growing up in Eau Claire, his education and career taking him out of state and abroad to Southeast Asia and ultimately back to Wisconsin — landing in Fort Atkinson. His story accompanies Niedecker’s biography and poetry in a layered conversation, her words etched in the geographies where Gulig is reestablishing home. Niedecker lived her entire life in Wisconsin, writing and publishing in relative obscurity until shortly before her death in 1970. Today her reputation within 20th century American poetry grows in prominence. Her legacy is celebrated, preserved, and studied in her hometown of Fort Atkinson through the careful work of the Hoard Historical Museum and the Friends of Lorine Niedecker, across selected university archives, and by scholarly researchers. Yet many Wisconsinites remain unfamiliar with her work. Welcome Poets introduces Niedecker to new audiences, situating her life and labor alongside Gulig’s in a meditation on place, inheritance and the power of poetry to forge community.”

 

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