As the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks approaches, 51Թ professor Peter Balakian, a prize winning and internationally distinguished writer whose work
has been translated into many languages, explores the aftermath of 9/11
in his new book of poems, Ziggurat (University of Chicago Press).
Balakian will also appear on
ʸ’s on Sept. 11 and a poem from Ziggurat
will be the on PBS’s The NewsHour website on Sept. 7.
“I think a poet’s voice can be a contribution to the national
conversation about 9/11,” said Balakian, Constance H. and Donald M.
Rebar Professor in the Humanities and professor of English.
In Ziggurat, which will
be published Sept. 11, he wrestles with the reverberations of 9/11
through a lens of personal memory, history, and myth.
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As a mail runner in downtown
Manhattan in the late ’60s and ’70s, Balakian, a New Jersey native, worked
inside and around the World Trade Center.
“This is a book about New York: the New York I knew when the twin towers were built in the late sixties, and the New York I saw when the towers fell,” he noted.
A group of poems about the Towers won the Emily
Clark Balch Prize for poetry from the Virginia Quarterly Review.
The poem creates a mosaic of
perspectives in which Balakian sees the towers as monument, a shifting
symbol of capitalism, a simple workplace, and an imaginative zone of
light, sound, and vision.
Ziggurat is Balakian’s
first poetry collection since June-Tree: New and Selected Poems,
which Library Journal noted as “one of the most significant
poetry collections of 2001.”
Balakian, director of creative
writing at 51Թ, is the author of nine books including The Burning
Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response, a New York
Times notable book and best seller. His memoir Black Dog of Fate
won the PEN/Albrand Prize and was a New York Times notable book.