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Robert Burns at 250:
Poetry, Politics & Performance

Symposium: February 24-25, 2009

Participant Biographies

Note: information will be added to this page as it becomes available.

Margaret Bennett earned her master's degree in folklore at the Memorial University of Newfoundland and her PhD at the University of Edinburgh. From 1984 to 1995, she was a lecturer in Scottish Ethnology at the School of Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh. She is the author of several books, including The Last Stronghold: Scottish Gaelic Traditions in Newfoundland (1989), Oatmeal and the Catechism: Scottish Gaelic Settlers in Quebec (2003), and Scottish Customs from Cradle to Grave (2005). Currently, she is a lecturer at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.

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Valentina Bold
Valentina Bold, University of Glasgow.
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Valentina Bold is Head of Scottish Studies at the University of Glasgow’s Dumfries campus. Robert Burns spent his final years in Dumfries, and Bold is part of the Burns Appreciation and Research in Dumfries (BARD) team there. She convenes the postgraduate program in Robert Burns Studies, as well as the master's degree program in Scottish Cultural Heritage. She is known for her work on Scottish poetry and song, and has a particular interest in the Scottish communities of the U.S. and Canada. Bold’s publications include James Hogg: A Bard of Nature’s Making (2007) and Smeddum: A Lewis Grassic Gibbon Anthology (2001), as well as the CD-ROM Northern Folk: Living Traditions of North East Scotland (1999). Her new edition of Burns’s Merry Muses of Caledonia will be published in 2009. On October 21, 2008 she presented a lecture at the Library of Congress, "A Bard of Nature's Making: Robert Burns and Scottish Traditional Culture".

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John Cole
John Y. Cole, Jr., Center for the Book, Library of Congress.
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John Y. Cole, Jr. , librarian and historian, is the founding and current Director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress. The Center for the Book was created in 1978 by Librarian of Congress Daniel J. Boorstin to use the resources of the Library to stimulate public interest in books and reading. Cole has a PhD in American Civilization from the George Washington University, and has published widely about the history of books, reading, and libraries, as well as the history and role of the Library of Congress. Most recently, he co-edited, with Jane Aikin, The Encyclopedia of the Library of Congress: For Congress, the Nation & the World (2004), a 569-page reference work. In 2000, Cole received the National Libary Association's Lippencott Award for distinguished service to the profession of librarianship. For more information select the link to view his Library of Congress web page.

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Ted Cowan
Ted Cowan, University of Glasgow.
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Ted Cowan, PhD, is a Professor of Scottish History and the Director of the University of Glasgow’s Crichton Campus, in Dumfries. He participates in the Burns Appreciation and Research in Dumfries (BARD) team. He received the Scottish Arts Council Award for his book Montrose For Covenant and King (1977, reprinted 1995). He is the author of several books on Scottish history and culture, including Folk in Print: Scotland’s Chapbook Heritage, 1750-1850, with Mike Patterson (2007); ‘For Freedom Alone’: The Declaration of Arbroath 1320 (2003); Scottish Fairy Belief: A History, with Lizanne Henderson (2007); Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Medieval Era, ed., with R. A. McDonald (2000, reprinted 2003); and Scotland Since 1688: Struggle for a Nation, with Richard Finlay (2000). He has also written many articles and edited a number of collections of articles related to Scottish history and culture. For a complete bibliography, select this link to go to his University of Glasgow web page.

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Robert Crawford
Robert Crawford, St. Andrews University, 2007.
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Robert Crawford's most recent collection of poems, Full Volume, was shortlisted for the 2009 T. S. Eliot Prize. His prose books include Scotland's Books: A History of Scottish Literature (2009) and The Bard, a biography of Robert Burns (2009). He is Professor of Modern Scottish Literature at the University of St. Andrews.

Abstract: "America's Bard." Addressed to a general audience, this lecture considers what America meant to Burns and the way in which Burns has been treasured by American writers including Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, and Maya Angelou. Though Burns is rightly regarded as the national bard of Scotland, thanks to his democratic voice, his admiration for the American Revolution, and his impact on American writers, he can also be called "America's Bard."

Nat Edwards, Education and Interpretative Services Manager, National Library of Scotland.

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Patricia Gray
Patricia Gray, Poetry Center, Library of Congress.
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Patricia Gray heads the Poetry and Literature Center, Library of Congress. Her volume of poems, Rupture, was chosen by the Montserrat Review as one of the best books of poetry for 2005. She has received several artist fellowships for poetry from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities, the most recent of which was in 2006. Gray designed and coordinates the Poetry at Noon reading series, which celebrates its 15th anniversary this year at the Library of Congress. In 2005, she served on the coordinating committee for "DC Celebrates Whitman: 150 Years of Leaves of Grass." Her poems may be heard online in the Poet and the Poem Series. Select the link to listen to the audio recording.

 

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Billy Kay
Billy Kay
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Billy Kay Billy Kay is an award-winning writer and broadcaster who has devoted his life to making Scots, at home and abroad, aware of their rich cultural heritage. He is the author of the influential work on the history of the Scots language, Scots: The Mither Tongue. His latest book, The Scottish World: A Journey into the Scottish Diaspora, details the cultural legacy of the Scots in diverse parts of the world. Through his independent production company, Odyssey Productions, he regularly contributes radio documentaries on Scottish cultural history to BBC Radio Scotland. For more information, select this link to go to billykay.co.uk/.

Abstract: For the Symposium at the Library of Congress, Kay will apply the old Scots saying he heard as a child, “Thaim wi a guid Scots tongue in their heid are fit tae gang ower the warld,” and explore the theme of linguistic and national identity in the Scots-speaking heartlands of Ayrshire and Dumfriesshire, the area both Robert Burns and Billy Kay called home. (As Burns described it, “o aw the airts the wind can blaw, I dearly like the West....")  Billy will illustrate his talk with audio clips from his BBC programmes, letting the American audience hear how the language in which Burns wrote his greatest poetry and songs still thrives as a living language at the core of communities today. He will also place Scots in an American and international context, and examine whether the language will continue as a cherished part of Scottish identity when we come to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the birth of the National Bard.

Marc Lambert, Chief Executive, Scottish Book Trust.

Ed Miller, has been hailed as "one of the finest singers to come out of the Scottish Folksong Revival" and as "one of Scotland's best singing exports." Originally from Edinburgh, he has for many years been based in Austin, Texas. At the University of Texas, he earned graduate degrees in Folklore and Geography, and has been a radio presenter at KUT for over thirty years. Miller is a frequent performer at concerts, clubs, festivals, Highland games and Burns suppers, and also gives lectures and leads workshops on Scottish folklore. Miller has recorded seven CDs of traditional and contemporary Scottish songs. His latest, Lyrics of Gold, is devoted to songs written or collected by Robert Burns.

Cate Newton, Director of Collections and Research, National Library of Scotland.

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Kay Ryan
Kay Ryan
U.S. Poet Laureate. Photo by Christina Koci Hernandez
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Kay Ryan, Poet Laureate of the United States, was born in California in 1945, and grew up in the small towns of the San Joaquin Valley and the Mojave Desert. She received both bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles. Ryan has published several collections of poetry, including The Niagara River (2005); Say Uncle (2000); Elephant Rocks (1996); Flamingo Watching (1994), which was a finalist for both the Lamont Poetry Selection and the Lenore Marshall Prize; Strangely Marked Metal (1985); and Dragon Acts to Dragon Ends (1983). Her poetry has won many awards, including the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize (2004). For more information about Kay Ryan, including a biography, poems, audio, and video, go to the Library of Congress Kay Ryan: Online Resources page.

Myra Sklarew is former president of the artist community Yaddo, and professor emerita of literature at American University, where she founded the MFA Program in Creative Writing. Sklarew is the author of three chapbooks and six collections of poetry, most recently Lithuania: New & Selected Poems (1995) and The Witness Trees (2000), as well as a collection of short fiction, Like A Field Riddled by Ants (1987), and a collection of essays, Over the Rooftops of Time (2002). Her poetry has been recorded for the Contemporary Poet's Archives of the Library of Congress. A nonfiction work entitled Holocaust and the Construction of Memory is forthcoming from SUNY Press. Sklarew’s awards include the National Jewish Book Council Award in Poetry, the PEN Syndicated Fiction Award for short stories, the Anna Davidson Rosenberg Award from the Judah Magnes Museum, grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation, and the University Scholar/Teacher Award from American University. She was educated at Tufts University, where she studied biology, at the Cold Spring Harbor Biological Laboratory, where she worked with Salvador Luria and Max Delbruck, and in the writing seminars at the Johns Hopkins University. She began her work at American University in 1970, and her first students included soldiers returning from the Vietnam War. (Select this link and scroll down to "Judith Farr and Myra Sklarew" to listen to the audio recording of Myra Sklarew from the Poet and the Poem series, Library of Congress, 2008.)

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Stephen Winick
Stephen Winick, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.
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Stephen Winick is the writer and editor for the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.  He has a master’s degree and a PhD in folklore and folklife from the University of Pennsylvania.  He has taught folklore courses at the University of Pennsylvania and George Mason University, and has published widely on folklore and folk music in both academic and popular publications. His academic publications include articles on British folksongs and ballads, American proverbs, and medieval English literature.  He is the editor, with Kimberly Lau and Peter Tokofsky, of “What Goes Around Comes Around”: The Circulation of Proverbs in Everyday Life.  He has also been a music journalist for many years, covering folk and traditional music and song of Britain, Ireland, Europe and North America, for such publications as Dirty Linen magazine and The All Music Guide.

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