Birth Date: | 1946 |
Birth Place: | Hartford, Connecticut, US |
Workplaces: | University of Arizona |
Awards: | 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship |
Alma Mater: | Vermont College of Fine Arts |
Discipline: | creative writing |
Sub Discipline: | poetry |
Alison Hawthorne Deming (b. 1946 Hartford, Connecticut) is an American poet, essayist and teacher, former Agnese Nelms Haury Chair in Environment and Social Justice and currently Regents Professor Emerita in Creative Writing at the University of Arizona. She received a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship.
Deming was born and grew up in Connecticut. She is a great-granddaughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne. She worked in health care for fifteen years, including a decade with Planned Parenthood.[1] In 1983 she received an Master of Fine Arts in Poetry from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She has also been a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University and a Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, Massachusetts. She received two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1990 she became Director of the University of Arizona Poetry Center, where she served until 2002, also teaching in the University of Arizona Creative Writing Program. She was Distinguished Visiting Writer at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in 1997 and has taught in many venues including the Prague Summer Program, Bread Loaf Environmental Writer's Workshop, University of Montana Environmental Writing Institute, Taos Summer Writer's Conference, Indiana University Writers' Conference and many other venues. She served as poet-in-residence at the Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens in Florida as part of the Language of Conservation Project for Poet's House. She has had residencies at the Yaddo, Djeraasi Resident Artist's Program, The Mesa Refuge, The Island Institute in Sitka, Alaska, Hawthornden International Retreat for Writers, The Hermitage Artists Retreat and the H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest among others. Her new nonfiction book "A Woven World: On Fashion, Fishermen, and the Sardine Dress" was published by Counterpoint Press in 2021.
She has taught at the University of Arizona since 1990 and was appointed Agnes Nelms Haury Chair in 2014.[2] She lives in Tucson, Arizona[3] and Grand Manan, New Brunswick, Canada. Her daughter is the artist Lucinda Bliss.[4]
Deming's work has been widely published and anthologized including in Ecotone, Orion, The Georgia Review, terrain.org, OnEarth, Parthenon West, Hawk and Handsaw, Sierra, Gnosis, American Poetry Review, Eleven Eleven, Western Humanities Review, The Massachusetts Review, Cutthroat, Verse and Universe: Poems on Science and Mathematics, The Norton Book of Nature Writing and Best American Science and Nature Writing.