Laura McCullough

Laura McCullough
Born 1960 (age 5556)
Jersey City, New Jersey
Occupation Associate Professor of English, Brookdale Community College
Language English
Alma mater Goddard College
Genre Poetry
Years active 2006–present
Website
www.lauramccullough.org

Laura M. McCullough (born 1960) is an American poet and writer living in the state of New Jersey. McCullough is the author of six published collections and is the founding editor of Mead: the Magazine of Literature and Libations.

Early years

Laura M. McCullough was born in Jersey City, New Jersey. She attended The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey, from which she holds a Bachelor of Arts degree.[1] Following graduation she attended Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont, earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in Writing and Literature.[1]

Academic career

McCullough is a Professor of English at Brookdale Community College[2] where she founded the creative writing program. She previously taught at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey and Ramapo College, and teaches in the Sierra Nevada College low-residency MFA.[3]

Published work

McCullough's poetry, short fiction, and essays have appeared in an array of journals and literary magazines, including The Georgia Review, The American Poetry Review. Green Mountains Review, The Good Men Project, The Writer's Chronicle, Gulf Coast, and Painted Bride Quarterly.[4]

McCullough's second collection of poetry, What Men Want, published in 2008, derives its title from a love poem in the collection, "What Men Really Want."[5] McCullough explained her perspective in a September 2007 interview:

I grew up in a family with only brothers on a street with only boys. Up until recently, I only had sons. My life has been defined by men. The poet, Ross Gay, and I were discussing this one day, and he suggested I am a male-identified woman. I thought that was very interesting. I learned rules of boy culture before I learned the code of girlhood.[5]

In 2013, four more of McCullough's works were published: her fifth full-length book of poetry, Rigger Death & Hoist Another; a fiction chapbook; a short fiction hybrid; and an edited collection of essays on the poet Stephen Dunn (published by Syracuse University Press).[6]

In a 2014 interview with The California Journal of Women Writers, McCullough noted the evolution of her work from poetry towards fiction and her reassertion of a first-person perspective in her work, a perspective missing from her previous full-length poetic work, Panic (2011):

Many of the poems in Panic are emotionally true for me—living in post-911 New Jersey, raising teenage sons, having people in my life with health issues—but none of the poems were written in first person; I wasn’t complicit in any of them, and this began to seem emotionally dishonest.... In Rigger Death & Hoist Another, I tried to keep narrative rebar in the structures of my poems, but re-claim the authorial 'I' in creating the poems and the world view of the poems in relation to each other.[6]

McCullough's 2013 short novella Ripple & Snap borrows heavily on autobiographical themes, examining through the prism of fiction public suicide as a reprise to the self-inflicted death of her boyfriend when McCullough was a teenager.[6] McCullough is working on a non-fiction memoir about the event, attempting "to find a way to tell it true."[6]

Awards

McCullough is the Florida Writers' Circuit 2014/15 poet.[4] She has been a finalist for the Brittingham Prize in Poetry and the Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry, the BOA Editions Isabella Gardner Award, and the Frost Place residency.[4]

On feminism

McCullough dislikes the term "feminist,"[5] and has criticized the gender exclusivity espoused by certain extreme elements in the organized women's movement:

Many of the men I know who call themselves feminists—some of whom are men I love –also exhibit deep self-loathing over their own masculinity because of the shame they have acquired about maleness. How can I embrace something that turns people I love into perpetrators, tyrants, and villains? Yes. It is easy in this culture to forget that women around the world are killed every day, are sold into slavery, are ignored, demeaned, tortured because they are seen as less than human. This is utterly deplorable; it’s beyond imagining, and yet it is true. But to say that men are evil based on their gender is as single-minded, and wrongheaded in my view, as the worldview that doesn'’t allow women to be people.[5]

Works

Full-length poetry collections

Chapbooks and other projects

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 William Slaughter (ed.), "Laura McCullough," Mudlark: An Electronic Journal of Poetry & Poetics, whole no. 32 (2007).
  2. "English Department Faculty and Staff," Brookdale Community College, brookdalecc.edu/
  3. in Creative Writing Faculty for Sierra Nevada Low-Residency Program
  4. 1 2 3 "2014-2015 FLAC Writers Circuit Writers," Florida Writer's Circuit, www.floridarts.org/
  5. 1 2 3 4 Adam Elenbaas, "What Men Want: An Interview with Laura McCullough," Reality Sandwich, Sept. 11, 2007.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Stacey Balkun, "Interview: Laura McCullough," The California Journal of Women Writers, Feb. 10, 2014.

External links

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