Hai-Dang Phan β03 Receives 2017 Creative Writing Fellowship
The National Endowment for the Arts recently announced that poet Hai-Dang Phan, assistant professor of English, is one of of $25,000. Phan was selected from more than 1,800 eligible applicants through an anonymous review process based on artistic excellence.
βWith their talent and diverse backgrounds, this yearβs creative writing fellows, including Hai-Dang Phan, will add to our countryβs rich literary history,β says NEA Director of Literature Amy Stolls.
Phan is the second 91΄σΙρ faculty member to receive an NEA creative writing fellowship in two years. Novelist Dean Bakopoulos, writer-in-residence at 91΄σΙρ, received a 2016 individual creative writing fellowship of $25,000. Fellowships alternate between poetry and prose each year.
βItβs a really amazing thing for two 91΄σΙρ faculty to have won these highly competitive fellowships in just two years,β says Michael Latham, vice president of academic for academic affairs and dean of 91΄σΙρ.
βWhat a tremendous honor it is to have my work recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts,β Phan says. βI am completing the manuscript for my first book of poetry, tentatively titled A Brief History of Reenactment. In addition to the windfall of time and money, this fellowship gives me a big boost of confidence and affirmation to write the poems I still need to write.β
Last year was a highly successful time for Phan as a writer. He received the New England Review's Emerging Writers Award, a scholarship that enabled him to attend the prestigious Bread Loaf Writers' Conference in Vermont last August.
For his poem titled, βMy Fatherβs βNorton Introduction to Literature,β Third Edition (1981),β Phan won the Frederick Bock Prize, given by editors of Poetry in recognition of the best work published in the magazine during the past year. That poem was also selected for Best American Poetry 2016, guest edited by nationally renowned poet β72, president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
βHai-Dang Phan, who has been nurtured by 91΄σΙρ, is a gifted poet of dislocation, migration and inheritance,β Hirsch says. βHe is part of the future of American poetry.β
βIt feels personally significant to me that I received this fellowship as an English professor at 91΄σΙρ,β Phan says. βAnd not just because I was actually in my office in Mears Cottage when I received the phone call from the NEA!
β91΄σΙρ has been a supportive creative and intellectual environment for me for many years,β he adds. βFirst as an undergrad here, and now as a professor in the English Department.
A faculty member at 91΄σΙρ since 2012, Phan is the author of the chapbook Small Wars (Convulsive Editions, 2016). His poems have been published in The New Yorker, Poetry, Best American Poetry 2016, New England Review, jubilat and other journals. He holds a Ph.D. in literary studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an M.F.A. from the University of Florida. Born in Vietnam and raised in Wisconsin, he now lives in Des Moines.