Ray Hsu: Difference between revisions

From Asian Canadian Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{AAType
{{AAType
|Image=11437 878619043317 8637846 52986294 3096208 n.jpg
|Image=102212 tedx photo square crop.jpeg
|Home page=http://thewayofray.com/
|Home page=http://thewayofray.com/
|Location=Vancouver
|Location=Vancouver
|Arts=Arts, Poetry
|Arts=Arts, Academia/Research, Poetry
|Type=Person
|Type=Person
}}
}}
Ray Hsu is author of two books. While completing his Ph.D. in English Literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he taught for over two years at Oakhill Correctional Institution, where he founded the Prison Writing Workshop.
Dr. Ray Hsu is author of two award-winning books of poetry. While completing his Ph.D. in English Literary Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he taught for over two years at in US prison, where he founded the Prison Writing Workshop.
 
He now teaches at the University of British Columbia, where he will be teaching a pioneering Asian Canadian Creative Writing course and a member of the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop.


He teaches poetry at UBC, where he taught the first-ever Asian Canadian Creative Writing workshop. He is also former editor of Ricepaper magazine.




'''Books'''
'''Books'''


Anthropy (Nightwood Editions, 2004, winner of the Gerald Lampert Award)
Anthropy (Nightwood Editions, 2004, winner of the Gerald Lampert Award, nominated for a Trillium Book Award in Poetry)


Cold Sleep Permanent Afternoon (Nightwood Editions, 2010)
Cold Sleep Permanent Afternoon (Nightwood Editions, 2010, winner of an Alcuin Award)

Revision as of 18:45, 22 October 2012

Créer la version française

Ray Hsu


Location

Vancouver


Published books

TitleExtended titleYear of Publication
Anthropy2004

Dr. Ray Hsu is author of two award-winning books of poetry. While completing his Ph.D. in English Literary Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he taught for over two years at in US prison, where he founded the Prison Writing Workshop.

He teaches poetry at UBC, where he taught the first-ever Asian Canadian Creative Writing workshop. He is also former editor of Ricepaper magazine.


Books

Anthropy (Nightwood Editions, 2004, winner of the Gerald Lampert Award, nominated for a Trillium Book Award in Poetry)

Cold Sleep Permanent Afternoon (Nightwood Editions, 2010, winner of an Alcuin Award)