Shane Rhodes
Encyclopedia

Life

He graduated from the University of New Brunswick
University of New Brunswick
The University of New Brunswick is a Canadian university located in the province of New Brunswick. UNB is the oldest English language university in Canada and among the first public universities in North America. The university has two main campuses: the original campus founded in 1785 in...

.
He lives in Ottawa, Canada.

As the 2008 winner of the Lampman-Scott Award for Poetry, Shane Rhodes turned over half of the $1,500 prize money to the Wabano Centre for Aboriginal Health, a First Nations health centre, according to a 2008 report by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. "Taking that money wouldn't have been right," Rhodes said. The CBC reported that Rhodes felt "Scott's legacy as a civil servant overshadows his work as a pioneer of Canadian poetry."

Awards

  • Alberta Book Award for poetry, for The Wireless Room
  • 2003 Archibald Lampman Award, for Holding Pattern
  • 2008 Lampman-Scott Award, for The Bindery
  • The 2009 PK Page Founders Award for Poetry from the Malahat Review
  • Winner of the 34th National Magazine Awards for poetry (2011)

Works


Chapbook broadside

Anthologies

  • The Best Canadian Poetry in English 2008. Stephanie Bolster, ed. Tightrope Books, 2008.
  • Best Gay Poetry 2008. Lawrence Schimel, ed. A Midsummer Night’s Press: New York, 2008.
  • New Canadian Poetry. Even Jones, ed. Fitzhenry and Whiteside, 2000.

Criticism

  • "Field Notes: Shane Rhodes reviews The Natural Selection by Christopher Dewdney", Jacket 18
  • "Matrimony of the Sign: The Ideas and the Things in William Carlos Williams' Paterson" William Carlos Williams and the Language of Poetry, National Poetry Foundation, 2002.
  • "Buggering with History: Sexual Warfare and Historical Reconstruction in Timothy Findley's The Wars." Canadian Literature, 1998.
  • "Frontier Fiction: Reading Books in M. G. Vassanji's The Book of Secrets." Ariel: A Review of International English Literature, 1998.
  • "An Interview with M.G. Vassanji." Studies in Canadian Literature, 1997.

Reviews

Shane Rhodes takes a lot of poetic risks in The Wireless Room (NeWest 2000). Rhodes is not governed by any one style, form, language, or theme; he is about variation, innovation, intelligence, and electricity.


About Rhodes' The Bindery, his third book, a Canadian Literature review states:
Part travelogue, part genealogy, part guide to Latin-American commerce, part cabinet of wonder—the poems in Shane Rhodes’ The Bindery are “replete with historical rhyme” (“The Market Place”). The anchor of the book is the title poem, a polysemic catalogue that unfolds in 99 sections, moving from a grandfather escaping the “unneeded attention of gods” on his birthday, to the renovated pastoral of “Arcadia, / lashed / to the lamp post!” Rhodes explores the resonances and dissonances of cultural, physical, and emotional rhyme. Whatever is bound together (family, history, economies) inevitably escapes such binds. This is a book about the semiotics of travel, between territories and bodies, between aesthetics and ethics: “For the Mexican bus driver who stopped in the middle of a busy street and, with an array of honks and complicated hand gestures, made a date with the woman working cash at a convenience store” (“On Travel”). Rhodes’ inventive poems travel between different forms (prose poem, catalogue, anaphora, to name but a few) at once employing the luminous descriptive resources of the lyric and also subverting the totality of any finished picture, any final destination. The metaphorical leaps, the paratactic contingencies in these poems reinforce not only the affective materiality of travel in unfamiliar places but also the difficulty with which language travels to and from the referent—the words we bind and that bind us. The Bindery is Rhodes’ third book and builds on the considerable accomplishments of his earlier works The Wireless Room and Holding Pattern. This is a book worth taking along on any trip.

External links

Audio Recordings from Err
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