Susan Howe (born June 10, 1937) is an American poet, scholar, and critic renowned for her experimental poetry that blends historical research, visual elements, and linguistic innovation, often associated with the avant-garde Language poetry movement.[1][2] Her work frequently examines themes of feminism, colonial history, and marginalized voices in American literature, employing fragmented structures, archival materials, and typographical experimentation to challenge traditional narrative forms.[1][2]Born in Boston, Massachusetts, and raised in nearby Cambridge, Howe initially pursued acting and visual arts, graduating from the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts in 1961, before turning to poetry in the 1970s.[3][4] In 1998, she was a Distinguished Fellow at the Stanford Institute of the Humanities and later became a longtime professor of English at the University at Buffalo, where she held the Samuel P. Capen Chair of Poetry and the Humanities from 1989 to 2007, retiring as professor emerita.[2][5] Her scholarly contributions include influential critical works such as My Emily Dickinson (1985), which reinterprets the life and writings of Emily Dickinson through a feminist lens, and The Birth-Mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History (1993), named a Times Literary Supplement International Book of the Year.[1][5]Howe's poetry collections, including The Europe of Trusts (1990), The Nonconformist's Memorial (1993), Pierce-Arrow (1999), The Midnight (2003), Souls of the Labadie Tract (2007), Debths (2017), and Penitential Cries (2025), have earned her numerous accolades, such as two American Book Awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1996, the Bollingen Prize in American Poetry in 2011, and the Griffin Poetry Prize in 2018 for Debths.[1][5][6] She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1999 and served as Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 2001 to 2006.[1][7] Now residing in Guilford, Connecticut, Howe continues to influence contemporary poetry through collaborations, such as audio works with musician David Grubbs and visual projects with artist James Welling.[2][7]
Early life and education
Family and upbringing
Susan Howe was born on June 10, 1937, in Boston, Massachusetts.[1][8]Her father, Mark DeWolfe Howe, was a prominent Harvard Law School professor and legal historian of American constitutional law, whose scholarly work emphasized civil liberties and historical jurisprudence.[9][10][11] Howe's Irish-American heritage stemmed from her mother's Dublin roots, blended with her father's Boston Brahmin lineage, creating a bicultural family dynamic.[12][13] Her mother, Mary Manning Howe, was an accomplished Irish playwright, actress, and novelist born in Dublin in 1905, who had trained at the Abbey Theatre under Sara Allgood and performed with the Gate Theatre before emigrating to the United States in 1935.[4][12][10]Howe grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts, alongside her younger sister, the poet Fanny Howe, and another sister, Helen Howe Braider, a sculptor and painter, in a household shaped by intellectual rigor and creative pursuits.[4][14][15] The family's home environment reflected her father's academic immersion in legal history and her mother's theatrical background, fostering an atmosphere rich in discussion, performance, and transatlantic cultural ties.[4][10]From an early age, Howe was exposed to literature and theater through her mother's connections to Dublin's Abbey Theatre and her friendships with figures like Samuel Beckett, whom Manning knew from her youth; this influence permeated family life, including summer visits to Ireland beginning in 1938 when Howe was an infant.[12][9][13] Such experiences in an artistic and scholarly setting laid subtle groundwork for her later explorations of archival history and familial narratives in her poetry.[10]
Education and early influences
Susan Howe was born in 1937 in Boston, Massachusetts, and grew up in Cambridge, immersed in a household rich with literary and scholarly influences from her parents—a law professor father and an Irish actress and playwright mother.[16][10] Her early exposure to books and performance shaped her multidisciplinary interests, though formal education began in the local school system before expanding into artistic pursuits.Howe pursued visual arts training at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, earning a B.F.A. in painting in 1961.[10][17] There, she focused on painting and developed skills in collage and installation, which later informed her poetic compositions by treating the page as a visual field.[10] This period marked her initial commitment to the arts, blending observation of form and material with conceptual exploration.In her early adulthood, Howe spent significant time in Ireland, drawn by her mother's heritage and connections to the country's cultural scene; she visited Dublin as a child in 1938 and 1947, and returned after high school for deeper immersion.[9] Influenced by her mother Mary Manning's career at the Abbey and Gate Theatres, Howe studied acting in Dublin and worked as a stage designer, engaging with avant-garde performance traditions that emphasized experimental staging and textual adaptation.[4][18] These experiences in Irish theater, including collaborations echoing her family's ties to figures like W.B. Yeats and Samuel Beckett, fostered her interest in the interplay of voice, space, and narrative fragmentation.[10]Howe's initial forays into poetry emerged in the 1970s, building on her visual and theatrical background through experiments that incorporated collage techniques and spatial arrangements on the page.[10] Around age forty, following personal upheavals including divorce, she shifted decisively from visual arts and performance to writing, prompted by a friend's encouragement to adapt her artistic "hinge pictures" into printed form, resulting in her debut publication Hinge Picture in 1974.[10] This transition reflected a convergence of her early influences, prioritizing textual materiality over canvas or stage.
Academic and professional career
Teaching positions
Susan Howe began her teaching career in the late 1980s as a Butler Fellow in English at the State University of New York at Buffalo (SUNY Buffalo) in 1988.[17] She continued there as a visiting professor of English in 1989 before joining the faculty full-time and advancing to professor of English in 1991.[17] At SUNY Buffalo, Howe held the Samuel P. Capen Chair of Poetry and the Humanities from 1989 until her retirement in 2007.[4] During her tenure, she co-founded the Poetics Program in 1991 alongside Charles Bernstein, Robert Creeley, Raymond Federman, and Dennis Tedlock, where she developed innovative courses on avant-garde poetry that emphasized experimental forms and historical contexts in literary studies.[19]In the 1990s, Howe held visiting faculty roles at other institutions, including as a visiting professor of English and scholar at Temple University, where she taught poetry and related topics.[17] She also served as the Leo Block Professor at the University of Denver from 1993 to 1994.[17] Additionally, in winter 1998, she was a Distinguished Fellow at the Stanford Institute of the Humanities.[1] These appointments allowed her to extend her influence in literary studies beyond Buffalo, often intersecting briefly with her scholarly interests in figures like Emily Dickinson.Through her workshops and seminars at SUNY Buffalo, Howe mentored emerging poets, including Jena Osman, fostering a generation engaged with language poetry and archival approaches.[20] Her teaching emphasized conceptual depth in women's literature and avant-garde traditions, contributing significantly to the field's development during her active years.[19] Following her retirement, Howe assumed emerita status at SUNY Buffalo, continuing occasional visiting roles at prestigious institutions.[21]
Scholarly contributions
Susan Howe's scholarly work has significantly advanced the understanding of Language poetry through her essays, which interrogate the interplay between poetic form and historical context, emphasizing how language structures both personal and collective memory. In these writings, she examines how experimental forms disrupt conventional narratives, allowing poetry to engage with suppressed historical layers in ways that traditional historiography cannot.[11] Her approach aligns her closely with the Language poets, a group she is often associated with for its focus on linguistic innovation.[4]Central to Howe's theoretical contributions is her development of ideas surrounding the "silenced" voices of women in American literature, where she posits that archival gaps and textual erasures reflect broader patriarchal exclusions. She argues that figures like Emily Dickinson embody a "stutter" in literary history—a fragmented, enthusiastic spirit that resists dominant narratives—revealing how women's writings were marginalized through editorial and cultural practices.[22] This framework, drawn from her analysis of early American texts, underscores poetry's role in recovering these absent presences, transforming feminist literary criticism by blending poetics with historical recovery.[23]Howe's editorial work on archival materials further exemplifies her scholarly method, involving meticulous reconstruction of historical documents to uncover overlooked narratives. Influenced by her father, Mark De Wolfe Howe, a Harvard Law professor and legal historian who introduced her to archival research during her youth, she adopted a rigorous approach to handling primary sources, often treating them as sites of contested authority.[24] This paternal legacy shaped her editorial practices, evident in her handling of manuscripts like those of Jonathan Edwards and Emily Dickinson, where she challenges standardized editions to highlight textual instabilities.[22]Throughout the 1990s and 2010s, Howe delivered influential lectures and conference presentations on poetics, including at the Modern Language Association (MLA) annual conventions. Notable among these was her 1994 MLA paper on Dickinson's antinomian poetic practice, which explored dissident elements in women's writing, and her participation in the 2006 MLA Presidential Forum on the sound of poetry.[25][26] These presentations disseminated her ideas on how poetics intersects with history and gender, fostering dialogue within academic circles on experimental forms.In her academic papers, Howe integrates visual and textual analysis to demonstrate how spatial arrangements on the page function as interpretive tools, akin to visual art's disruption of linear reading. This method, applied to historical texts, reveals how typography and layout encode power dynamics, allowing scholars to "read" silences as active elements in literary production.[27] Her innovative blending of these modes has enriched literary theory by expanding beyond verbal content to material form.[28]Howe's scholarship has had a lasting impact on curricula in experimental writing programs, particularly through her co-founding of the Poetics Program at the University at Buffalo in 1991 alongside Charles Bernstein, Robert Creeley, Raymond Federman, and Dennis Tedlock. This initiative integrated her theories into graduate-level instruction, emphasizing interdisciplinary approaches to poetics, history, and visuality, and influencing subsequent programs in avant-garde literary studies.[19]
Poetic works
Style and themes
Susan Howe's poetry is renowned for its experimental techniques that disrupt linear narrative through fragmentation, erasure, and typographical innovation. She employs disjointed layouts, overlapping lines, and severed words to challenge conventional syntax and reading practices, as seen in word squares and grids that force readers to navigate the page non-sequentially.[28]Erasure appears as "erased channels" and decomposed language, evoking the loss of historical accounts and marginalized voices, while typographical elements like diagonal text, upside-down arrangements, and varied fonts create visual textures that emphasize the materiality of the text.[29] These methods transform the poem into a spatial field, where white space functions as silence, mirroring archival gaps and inarticulate presences.[28]Central to Howe's themes are explorations of history, gender, colonialism, and marginalization, often sourced from 17th- to 19th-century American archives. Her work delves into colonial encounters and patriarchal structures, recovering silenced female figures such as Sarah Edwards or Hope Atherton, whose stories highlight gendered erasures in historical records.[29] Colonialism emerges through critiques of early American narratives, like those in Jonathan Edwards' manuscripts, which she recontextualizes to expose legacies of displacement and spiritual conquest.[28] Marginalized histories are invoked via "nocturnal" or ghostly presences in language—echoing hidden poetries and spectral traces—that suggest the haunting incompleteness of official accounts.[28]Howe incorporates archival fragments, extensive footnotes, and collage-like visual layouts to layer meaning and disrupt scholarly authority. Drawing from historical texts such as Puritan sermons or manuscript "pin holes," she assembles snippets into poems that resemble fragmented collages, with footnotes repurposed to question rather than clarify.[29] Her spatial arrangements, influenced by Charles Olson's projective verse and emphasis on the "felt fact," treat the page as an ocean-like expanse where words drift and collide, suspending linear mastery.[29] Emily Dickinson's impact is evident in Howe's play with margins, dashes, and silence, which evoke Dickinson's experimental fascicles and single-word intensities, fostering a poetics of withheld revelation.[28] These influences converge in layouts that prioritize experiential reading over narrative closure.Howe's style evolved from early visual poetry, such as her 1969–1971 installations and the text-based collages in Secret History of the Dividing Line (1978), toward later metaphysical inquiries in works like Souls of the Labadie Tract (2007) and THAT THIS (2010), where archival depth intensifies ghostly and spiritual dimensions.[29] This progression reflects a deepening engagement with language as a site of historical haunting and feminist recovery.[28]
Major poetry collections
Susan Howe's early poetry collections, published through small presses, marked her emergence as a visual and experimental poet. Hinge Picture (1974, Telephone Books) was her debut, featuring fragmented texts and visual elements derived from her background in painting. This was followed by Chanting at the Crystal Sea (1975, Fire Exit Press), a chapbook that explored mythic and linguistic disruptions through typographic experimentation. The Western Borders (1976, Tuumba Press) continued this trajectory, incorporating historical references to borders and silence in a concise, visually oriented format.[30][31]Her landmark collections in the late 1970s and early 1980s expanded these techniques into longer sequences. Cabbage Gardens (1979, Fathom Press) delved into colonial American history with layered, erased texts mimicking archival fragmentation. Secret History of the Dividing Line (1978, Telephone Books) drew on William Byrd's colonial journal, using recontextualized prose to interrogate boundaries and erasure. Defenestration of Prague (1983, Kulchur Foundation) combined historical events with personal myth, structured in sections like "Tuning the Sky" and "The Liberties," emphasizing disjunction and visual spacing. These works, often issued by independent publishers, exemplified Howe's signature style of collage and historical haunting.[30][32]In her mid-career, Howe transitioned to more established presses while maintaining experimental rigor. Singularities (1990, Wesleyan University Press) examined New England Indian Wars through probabilistic language and footnotes, blending poetry with scholarly interruption. The Europe of Trusts (1990, Sun & Moon Press), later reissued by New Directions, collected earlier sequences including Pythagorean Silence (1982, Montemora Foundation), a chapbook meditating on sound and silence via geometric and philosophical motifs. Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974-1979 (1996, New Directions) anthologized her initial works, providing a retrospective on her foundational visual-poetic methods.[33][34][30]Later collections deepened Howe's engagement with elegy and archive. Pierce-Arrow (1999, New Directions) evoked Jonathan Edwards and Emily Dickinson through serialized fragments and quotations, probing metaphysics and loss. The Midnight (2003, New Directions) addressed personal grief with dreamlike sequences incorporating Melville's marginalia. Souls of the Labadie Tract (2007, New Directions) investigated 17th-century French Protestantism via labadiean texts, using silence and typographic voids to evoke spiritual exile. That This (2010, New Directions) reflected on her mother's death through scored pages and overheard fragments, while Frolic Architecture (2010, Grenfell Press), a collaborative artist's book with James Welling's photograms, presented 48 collage poems in a boxed letterpress edition.[34][35][36]Howe's recent publications sustain her archival intensity amid themes of memory and mortality. Debths (2017, New Directions) recovered Thomas Smith's 17th-century journals, layering handwriting facsimiles with poetic responses to explore drowning and historical depths. Concordance (2020, New Directions) assembled uncollected works from 1993 to 2017, including site-specific pieces and visual scores that highlight her ongoing interplay of text and space. Penitential Cries (2025, New Directions), her latest at age 88, comprises four parts—a prose poem, word-collages, and a sparrow lyric—meditating on aging, trespass, and textual afterlife inspired by Thomas Wyatt. These volumes, alongside earlier chapbooks like Pythagorean Silence, underscore Howe's career-long commitment to small-press innovation before her New Directions affiliation.[34][37]
Critical writings and archival work
Key essays and books
Susan Howe's prose writings, particularly her essays and monographs, delve into the intersections of poetics, history, and archival materiality, often challenging canonical narratives through feminist and deconstructive lenses. Her critical works emphasize the fragmented nature of texts, drawing on historical documents to uncover silenced voices in American literature. These publications complement her poetic explorations by applying similar methods of collage and juxtaposition to literary criticism.My Emily Dickinson (1985), published by North Atlantic Books, presents a groundbreaking feminist reading of Emily Dickinson's work, focusing on the poet's manuscripts, fragments, and envelopes as sites of resistance against patriarchal editing practices. Howe examines Dickinson's engagement with texts like the Bible and Shakespeare, arguing that her poetry emerges from a "landscape of language" that disrupts linear narrative structures. The book meditates on Dickinson's poem "My Life had stood—a Loaded Gun" to explore themes of power, silence, and textual agency.[38][39]In The Birth-mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History (1993), issued by Wesleyan University Press, Howe investigates the "civil wars" embedded in early American texts, critiquing how editorial traditions have marginalized women writers such as Anne Hutchinson and Mary Rowlandson. The monograph traces the influence of Puritan documents and explores gender dynamics in the formation of American literary history, positioning literature as a battleground for ideological conflicts. Reissued by New Directions in 2015, it remains a seminal text for its analysis of how historical erasures shape canonical boundaries.[40][41]Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974–1979 (1996), published by New Directions, collects Howe's initial poetic experiments while including a critical introduction that reflects on her evolving poetics and the structural influences of language and history. The introduction frames these works as foundational to her later critical methodology, blending personal reflection with theoretical insights into form and fragmentation.[34][42]Spontaneous Particulars: The Telepathy of Archives (2014), co-published by New Directions and Christine Burgin, comprises a long essay on the tactile and interpretive dimensions of literary archives, incorporating photographs of manuscripts by figures like Emily Dickinson and Charles Olson. Howe describes archival research as a form of "telepathy," where the researcher communes with historical artifacts to reveal hidden narratives, emphasizing the physicality of documents over digital abstraction. The work underscores her belief in the archive's capacity to foster empathetic connections across time.[43][44]The Quarry: Essays (2015), released by New Directions, gathers previously uncollected essays arranged in reverse chronological order, spanning topics from tributes to Wallace Stevens to examinations of Herman Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne. These pieces map Howe's intellectual trajectory, integrating personal memoir with rigorous close readings that question artistic and historical legacies. The collection highlights her ongoing interest in the boundaries between poetry, criticism, and visual art.[45][46]
Research on historical figures
Susan Howe's research on Emily Dickinson centers on the poet's manuscripts and their editorial history, emphasizing how traditional editing practices have obscured Dickinson's experimental forms and silenced her voice. In her book My Emily Dickinson (1985), Howe critiques the interventions of editors like Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Mabel Loomis Todd, who normalized Dickinson's dashes, variants, and spatial arrangements to fit conventional print standards, thereby erasing the materiality of the originals. She argues that these manuscripts, with their "cancellations, variants, insertions, erasures, marginal notes, stray marks and blanks," reveal Dickinson's radical poetics as a form of resistance against patriarchal literary norms. Howe's analysis draws from facsimile editions, such as R.W. Franklin's The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson (1981), to advocate for a reading that honors the physical artifacts as sites of unfinished, open-ended meaning.[47][48]Howe's exploration of the 17th-century Puritan figure Hope Atherton informs her archival approach, drawing from captivity narratives and Puritan records to reimagine Atherton's historical wanderings in the New England wilderness as a narrative of dispossession and survival. Drawing from accounts of the "Falls Fight" in Deerfield, Massachusetts, in 1676 during King Philip's War, Howe portrays Atherton—a real historical minister who survived the ambush—as an alter ego embodying the fragmentation of female experience in colonial America. This research disrupts linear historical telling and highlights the silenced voices of early American women, transforming Atherton's story into a prophetic, didactic inquiry that questions the authority of official histories, as discussed in her essays such as "Personal Narrative" in The Quarry (2015).[49][45]In her investigations of 19th-century American literature, Howe examines gender dynamics through archival sources related to figures like Herman Melville, focusing on marginalia and annotations in his personal library to uncover how women's intellectual labor was effaced in historical records. Preserved in collections like those at the New York Public Library, these materials inform her critical essays on Melville's reading practices and their implications for literary history, as explored in The Quarry (2015) and related writings.[50][51]Howe's archival work also delves into Irish immigrant histories connected to her mother's lineage, tracing the Anglo-Irish experiences of displacement and cultural hybridity. Her mother's family, rooted in Dublin's literary and theatrical circles, informs her critical essays that incorporate letters and diaries from 19th-century Irish émigrés to explore themes of exile and identity formation in America. This personal-historical inquiry highlights the transatlantic migrations that shaped her own heritage, using primary documents to recover narratives of Irish women navigating colonial legacies, as seen in works like Spontaneous Particulars (2014).[52][11]Central to Howe's methodology is her frequent use of rare book rooms and libraries, including Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, to access primary sources like unpublished manuscripts and marginalia. At the Beinecke, she has examined materials related to Dickinson, Melville, and Puritan histories, treating these spaces as "wilderness" environments where fragmented documents allow for new interpretations. Her approach emphasizes physical engagement with artifacts, often photographing or transcribing them to preserve their tactile qualities against digitization's abstractions.[53][54]Howe describes her archival method as a form of "telepathy," a intuitive recovery of silenced voices through empathetic communion with historical texts, as elaborated in her essays and book Spontaneous Particulars: The Telepathy of Archives (2014). This concept frames research as a séance-like dialogue with the past, where the poet channels obscured perspectives—particularly those of women—from fragmented sources, fostering a poetics that bridges personal intuition and scholarly rigor. In works like her Blaney Lecture, Howe illustrates this by collaging images and texts from archives to evoke the "whispered rush" of unspoken histories.[55][43]
Artistic activities
Exhibitions and visual poetry
Susan Howe's visual poetry draws on her background in painting and collage, integrating typographic experiments that treat language as a material form, often incorporating archival fragments and historical texts to disrupt linear reading. Her early works from the 1970s and 1980s, such as Hinge Picture (1974) and Pythagorean Silence (1982), featured fragmented layouts and word squares that emphasized spatial arrangement over narrative flow, reflecting influences from Language poetry and conceptual art. These pieces, produced through small presses and artist book formats, were distributed and showcased via organizations like Printed Matter, which specialized in visual and experimental poetry during that era.[28][56]Howe's visual works have been presented in solo and group exhibitions that highlight their materiality and installation potential. Her first solo exhibition, "TOM TIT TOT," took place at Yale Union in Portland, Oregon, from October 5 to December 1, 2013, displaying a commissioned poem as a large-scale typographic installation printed on a letterpress, accompanied by related events and a limited-edition chapbook. The show underscored Howe's use of words as visual elements, with the poem's fragmented structure echoing her collage techniques. In this exhibition and others, her pieces often include overlaid texts from historical documents, creating layered compositions that invite viewers to engage with absence and erasure.[57]Group exhibitions have further contextualized Howe's contributions to visual and concrete poetry. At the 2014 Whitney Biennial in New York, her poems were installed as visual artworks, drawing from American, British, and Irish sources to explore folklore and critical theory through typographic disruption and spatial play. More recently, in 2022, Howe was featured in "Ora et Lege: The Palace of Concrete Poetry" at the Writers House of Georgia in Tbilisi, a group show that included her alongside pioneers like Bohumila Grögerová and Ewa Partum, focusing on the political dimensions of concrete poetry by women. This exhibition displayed her collage-based works and typographic experiments, emphasizing their role in challenging linguistic norms and materiality. These presentations often tie briefly to her poetic style, where visual fragmentation mirrors thematic concerns with history and marginal voices.[58][59]Howe's collaborations with artists on book-art objects have also appeared in gallery contexts, such as letterpress prints and custom editions produced with printers like Grenfell Press, which highlight the tactile quality of her visual poetry through limited-run installations and displays. For instance, special editions accompanying her audio works with musician David Grubbs incorporate visual collages that have been exhibited as standalone objects in poetry and art venues. Up to 2025, these elements continue to appear in surveys of experimental women's poetry, reinforcing Howe's impact on interdisciplinary practices.[60]
Collaborations and other projects
Throughout her career, Susan Howe has engaged in interdisciplinary collaborations that blend poetry with sound, visual art, and performance, often exploring historical and archival themes through multimedia forms. In the 1980s, she was actively involved in feminist avant-garde poetry circles associated with Language writing, contributing to a network of women poets such as Lyn Hejinian, Kathleen Fraser, and Rachel Blau DuPlessis, whose experimental works challenged patriarchal literary structures and emphasized innovative forms of feminist expression.[61][62]A significant strand of Howe's collaborative practice emerged in the 2000s through her partnerships with composer David Grubbs, resulting in several sound poetry recordings and live performances that integrate her textual fragments with musical improvisation. Their first joint project, Thiefth (2005), featured Howe's readings overlaid with Grubbs's guitar and electronics, drawing from her poem "Thorow" to create layered sonic landscapes.[63] This was followed by Souls of the Labadie Tract (2007), an audio exploration of Howe's archival research on 18th-century religious communities, and Frolic Architecture (2011), a 30-minute composition based on her poem from Souls of the Labadie Tract, performed live at venues like the Drawing Center and Harvard University.[64][65] Their collaboration continued with Woodslippercounterclatter (2015), incorporating field recordings and Howe's vocal improvisations to evoke fragmented historical narratives, and Concordance (2021), a duo performance of voice and piano drawn from her book of the same name.[66][67]Howe's performances often extend these collaborations into public settings, including poetry festivals and multimedia events where her readings incorporate visual projections to enhance the spatial and temporal dimensions of her work. For instance, during appearances at events like those hosted by ISSUE Project Room in 2011, she presented Frolic Architecture with projected texts and sounds, merging poetry with performative visuals.[68] In 2010, her book That This marked a key multimedia project, collaborating with photographer James Welling on six photograms that accompany her elegiac poems and collages, creating a hybrid text-image artifact drawn from personal and historical archives.[4][69]More recently, post-2020, Howe has deepened her archival engagements through projects involving institutional libraries, such as the adaptation and expansion of Concordance (originally a 2019 artist's book, reissued in 2020), which collages materials from 19th-century manuscripts and concordances accessed via collections like Yale's Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, where her own papers are also held.[70][54] These efforts highlight her ongoing role in collaborative preservation and reinterpretation of overlooked historical texts within scholarly repositories.
Awards and recognition
Literary awards
Susan Howe has received several prestigious literary awards recognizing her innovative contributions to poetry and criticism. In 1981, she was awarded the American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation for her poetry collection Secret History of the Dividing Line, which explores historical and linguistic fragmentation through experimental forms.[71][72] She received a second American Book Award from the same foundation in 1986 for My Emily Dickinson, a seminal work blending poetry and scholarship that reexamines Emily Dickinson's manuscripts and influence.[73]In 2011, Howe was honored with the Bollingen Prize in American Poetry from Yale University, awarded for lifetime achievement and specifically for her collection That This, praised for its elegiac depth and typographic innovation.[74] The Poetry Society of America presented her with the Robert Frost Medal in 2017, its highest honor for distinguished lifetime achievement in poetry, acknowledging her enduring impact on American letters.[75]Howe's 2017 collection Debths earned the 2018 International Griffin Poetry Prize, Canada's richest poetry award, with judges commending its "haunting" engagement with history, silence, and visual poetics.[76] Her 2025 publication Penitential Cries, a sparse meditation on aging and textual afterlives, has been recognized in contemporary reviews as a capstone to her career, though specific awards for it remain forthcoming as of late 2025.[6]
Fellowships and honors
Susan Howe received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1996 to support her work in poetry.[1] In 1998, she was named a distinguished fellow at the Stanford Institute for the Humanities.[16] She was elected to membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1999, recognizing her contributions to literature and scholarship. She served as Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 2001 to 2006.[1] In fall 2009, Howe served as the Anna-Maria Kellen Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, where she completed a new poetic work titled Frolic Architecture.[77]
Personal life
Marriages and family
Susan Howe was first married to the painter Harvey Quaytman in 1961, with whom she had a daughter, the artist R. H. Quaytman (born Rebecca Howe Quaytman).[78] The couple separated when their daughter was young, and Howe later reflected on this period as a time of artistic exploration amid personal transitions.[79]In the mid-1960s, Howe began living with the sculptor David von Schlegell, whom she married following her divorce from Quaytman; they remained together until his death in 1992.[80] With von Schlegell, Howe had a son, the writer Mark von Schlegell.[4] The family's artistic environment, shaped by von Schlegell's work in sculpture and Howe's emerging visual poetry, influenced her interdisciplinary approach, blending domestic life with creative experimentation.[81]Howe married the philosopher Peter Hare in 2000; he was a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the University at Buffalo, where Howe taught.[82] Hare died suddenly in 2008 from a pulmonary embolism, an event that profoundly affected Howe and inspired works such as Frolic Architecture (2010), which grapples with grief and absence.[9] No children resulted from this marriage.Howe's family relationships have deeply informed her poetry, particularly through her sister, the poet Fanny Howe, with whom she shares a legacy of innovative verse rooted in intellectual and artistic lineage.[10] Their sibling bond, alongside the pursuits of her children—R. H. Quaytman's abstract paintings and Mark von Schlegell's speculative fiction—fosters ongoing familial dialogues on form, history, and expression that echo in Howe's archival and textual explorations.[4]
Residence and later years
In the early phase of her career during the 1970s, Susan Howe resided in New York City, where she immersed herself in the vibrant artistic and literary scenes that influenced her transition from visual art to poetry.[18]In 1972, Howe relocated from Manhattan to Connecticut, prompted by her husband David von Schlegell's appointment at the Yale School of Art, allowing the family to settle closer to his workplace while raising their young children.[57] She has maintained her primary residence in Guilford, Connecticut, since that time, a coastal town that has provided a serene backdrop for her ongoing creative work.[4]From 1989 to 2007, during her tenure as the Samuel P. Capen Chair of Poetry and the Humanities at the State University of New York at Buffalo, Howe divided her time between Guilford and Buffalo, New York, commuting for her teaching responsibilities while continuing to develop her scholarly and poetic pursuits.[2]Following her retirement from academia in 2007, Howe's later years have centered on intensive writing and frequent visits to archives, where she delves into historical texts and manuscripts to fuel her explorations of language, history, and silence.[9] Now 88 years old as of 2025, she remains remarkably active, culminating in the publication of her collection Penitential Cries by New Directions on September 16, 2025, a work that weaves prose poems and collages reflecting on memory, loss, and the ethereal boundaries of expression.[6]
Legacy and influence
Critical reception
Susan Howe's early works received praise in avant-garde literary journals of the 1980s for their innovative approaches to language and form, particularly within the Language poetry movement. Publications in L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, a key periodical edited by Bruce Andrews and Charles Bernstein, highlighted her experimental disruptions of syntax and typography as a means to challenge conventional narrative structures and uncover historical silences.[83] Critics appreciated how these techniques positioned her poetry as a counter-method to dominant literary discourses, emphasizing fragmentation and visual arrangement to evoke the instability of meaning.[83]Rachel Blau DuPlessis has offered significant critiques of Howe's work through the lens of feminist historiography, focusing on her reclamation of marginalized voices and resistance to patriarchal erasure. In her analysis, DuPlessis describes Howe's fusion of experimentalism with materials like folk tales and early American autobiographies as a feminist project that interrogates power dialectics and gender binaries, transcending simplistic victimization narratives.[84] She praises Howe's emphasis on women's intellectual ambition and agency, as seen in texts like My Emily Dickinson, where silence and marginalia become tools to lift "anonymous, slighted—inarticulate" voices from historical obscurity.[84]Analyses in Elisabeth A. Frost's The Feminist Avant-Garde in American Poetry (2003) situate Howe within a tradition of women poets who unsettle American literary history through antinomian strategies. Frost examines Howe's engagement with discontinuity and marginality, arguing that her avant-garde tactics resist male-dominated canons while forging an alternative feminist lineage from the 1910s to the 1990s.[85] This scholarship underscores Howe's role in broadening the scope of experimental poetry to include feminist interrogations of national identity and textual authority.[85]Recent scholarship has continued to explore Howe's later works, such as Debths (2017) and Concordance (2020), for their intertextual depth and visual poetics. In a Hyperallergic review of Debths, critic John Yau highlights Howe's collage of Paul Thek's art, 19th-century literature, and fairy tales like "Tom Tit Tot" to probe themes of memory, soul, and women's resilience amid historical distress.[86] For Concordance, another Hyperallergic analysis in 2020 praises her fusion of graphic and verbal elements, particularly in poems like "Space Permitting," which confronts the silencing of female writers like Margaret Fuller through Thoreau's masculine lens, creating "rotating prisms" of text that evoke archaeological recovery.[61]Critical debates surrounding Howe's oeuvre often center on the tension between accessibility and experimental density, with her fragmented, visually dense texts challenging readers to actively construct meaning. Reviews note that works like That This and Thorow employ syntactic disruptions and collages that prioritize form over propositional clarity, leading some to view her poetry as opaquely chaotic while others celebrate it as a deliberate invitation to interpretive rebellion.[87]Howe's inclusion in major anthologies reflects her canonical status in postmodern poetry. She appears in Paul Hoover's Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology (1994), with selections like "Speeches at the Barriers," affirming her influence within avant-garde traditions alongside poets such as Charles Olson and Lyn Hejinian.[88]
Impact on contemporary poetry
Through her affiliation with Language poetry, Howe has played a pivotal role in extending its legacy into digital and visual realms, where her postlinear poetics—featuring word squares and spatial disruptions—have informed experimental works that integrate multimedia and hypertext elements.[28] Poets like Christian Bök and Kathleen Fraser have adopted similar visual tactics, transforming Language poetry's emphasis on linguistic fragmentation into dynamic, screen-based compositions that blur boundaries between text, image, and code.[28] This expansion has revitalized the movement for the digital age, influencing hybrid forms that respond to technological mediation of language and history.[89]As a founder of the Poetics Program at the University at Buffalo in 1991, Howe has exerted significant mentorship effects through workshops and graduate seminars, nurturing a cohort of poets who engage with avant-garde traditions and archival research.[19] Her teaching emphasized innovative approaches to sound, history, and form, impacting alumni and participants in Buffalo's vibrant experimental scene, including those who later contributed to global poetic discourses.[90]Howe's global reach has grown in the 2020s through European translations and festival appearances, with French editions of her works by Antoine Cazé at Ypsilon Éditeur introducing her archival poetics to new audiences across the continent.[91] Her participation in events like the International Literature FestivalBerlin has facilitated cross-cultural dialogues on experimental poetry, fostering translations into multiple languages and inspiring international poets to adopt her methods of historical reclamation.[3]Howe's contributions to discussions on decolonizing literary history continue, as her excavations of marginalized narratives—particularly those of women and indigenous figures in American archives—prompt ongoing scholarly and poetic efforts to dismantle Eurocentric and patriarchal canons. Her 2025 collection, Penitential Cries: Still Small Voice, published on September 16, 2025, further extends this legacy through experimental explorations of history, silence, and resilience.[6]