Pascale Petit (poet)

{{short description|French-born British poet}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2016}}

{{Use British English|date=October 2016}}

{{BLP sources|date=October 2012}}

{{Infobox writer

| name = Pascale Petit

| honorific_prefix =

| honorific_suffix =

| image = Pascale credit Kitty Sullivan.JPG

| image_size =

| alt =

| caption = Pascale Petit

| native_name =

| native_name_lang =

| pseudonym =

| birth_name =

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1953|12|20|df=y}}

| birth_place = Paris, France

| death_date =

| death_place =

| resting_place =

| occupation = Poet

| language = English

| nationality = French and British

| ethnicity =

| citizenship =

| education =

| alma_mater = Royal College of Art

| period = 1994–present

| genre =

| subject =

| movement =

| notableworks = {{Plainlist |

  • Mama Amazonica (2017)}}

| spouse =

| partner =

| children =

| relatives =

| awards = {{Plainlist |

  • RSL Ondaatje Prize, 2018
  • Laurel Prize for Poetry, 2020}}

| signature =

| signature_alt =

| module =

| website =

| portaldisp =

}}

Pascale Petit (born 20 December 1953),{{Cite web|title=Pascale Petit|url=http://lidiavianu.scriptmania.com/pascale_petit.htm|access-date=2021-06-24|website=lidiavianu.scriptmania.com}} is a French-born British poet of French, Welsh and Indian heritage. She was born in Paris and grew up in France and Wales. She trained as a sculptor at the Royal College of Art and was a visual artist for the first part of her life. She has travelled widely, particularly in the Peruvian and Venezuelan Amazon and India.

Petit has published eight poetry collections, four of which were shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize. Her seventh collection Mama Amazonica won the Ondaatje Prize in 2018 and the inaugural Laurel Prize for Poetry in 2020.{{Cite web|title=Petit takes inaugural Laurel Prize for Mama Amazonica {{!}} The Bookseller|url=https://www.thebookseller.com/news/petit-takes-inaugural-laurel-prize-mama-amazonica-1220977|access-date=2021-06-24|website=www.thebookseller.com}} In 2018, Petit was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.{{Cite web|title=Pascale Petit|url=https://rsliterature.org/fellow/pascale-petit/|access-date=2021-06-24|website=Royal Society of Literature|language=en-GB}}

Career

Petit has published eight poetry collections: Heart of a Deer (1998), The Zoo Father (2001), The Huntress (2005), The Treekeeper's Tale (2008), What the Water Gave Me: Poems After Frida Kahlo (2010), Fauverie (2014), Mama Amazonica (2017) and Tiger Girl (2020). She also published a pamphlet of poems The Wounded Deer: Fourteen Poems After Frida Kahlo (2005). For her work in poetry she has received many awards, including the Cholmondeley Award, four from Arts Council England and three from the Society of Authors.

Petit was shortlisted for the Forward Best Single Poem Prize after publishing "The Strait-Jackets" (from The Zoo Father) and in 2001 she was one of ten poets commissioned by BBC Radio 4 to write a poem for National Poetry Day. The Zoo Father (2001) was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. The Zoo Father (2001), The Huntress (2005), What the Water Gave Me: Poems After Frida Kahlo (2010), and Fauverie (2014) were all shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize. Three books were books of the year in The Observer, The Times Literary Supplement and The Independent.{{clarification needed|date=November 2024}} What the Water Gave Me was shortlisted for the Wales Book of the Year.

Petit's 2017 collection, Mama Amazonica, won the inaugural Laurel Prize for Poetry 2020, the 2018 Ondaatje Prize, was a Poetry Book Society Choice, and was shortlisted for the Roehampton Poetry Prize. Her 2020 collection Tiger Girl was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection.

The Zoo Father is published in a bilingual edition in Mexico and distributed in Spain and Latin America. Her books have been translated into Chinese, Serbian, Spanish (in Mexico) and French. She has also translated the poems of a number of contemporary Chinese poets including Yang Lian, Wang Xiaoni and Zhai Yongming. She was Poetry Editor of Poetry London from 1990 to 2005, a Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Middlesex University from 2007 to 2009 and a Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the Courtauld Institute of Art in 2011–12. She tutored poetry courses for Tate Modern for nine years, and currently tutors for the Arvon Foundation, the Poetry School and Literature Wales. The Poetry Book Society selected her as one of the 2004 Next Generation Poets, a promotional listing for spotlighting notable young to middle aged British poets. Petit became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2018.

Reception

The Australian poet Les Murray has praised her work in The Times Literary Supplement, where he wrote: "No other British poet I am aware of can match the powerful mythic imagination of Pascale Petit." Jackie Kay in The Observer wrote: "Pascale's poems are as fresh as paint, and make you look all over again at Frida and her brilliant and tragic life." Ruth Padel, reviewing What the Water Gave Me: Poems After Frida Kahlo in The Guardian wrote: "Petit's collection is not a verse biography, but a hard-hitting, palette-knife evocation of the effect that bus crash had on Kahlo's life and work. 'And this is how I started painting. / Time stretched out its spectrum / and screeched its brakes.' WH Auden, in his elegy for Yeats, tells the Irish poet: 'Mad Ireland hurt you into poetry.' Petit's collection, exploring the way trauma hurts an artist into creation, celebrates the rebarbative energy with which Kahlo redeemed pain and transformed it into paint."{{Cite news |last=Padel |first=Ruth |date=2010-06-11 |title=What the Water Gave Me by Pascale Petit |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/jun/12/what-water-gave-me-petit |access-date=2024-11-26 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}

Awards, prizes and fellowships

  • 2000 – "The Strait-Jackets" (from The Zoo Father) shortlisted for Forward Best Single Poem Prize
  • 2001 – New London Writers' Award
  • 2001 – Arts Council England Writers' Award
  • 2001 – The Zoo Father Poetry Book Society Recommendation
  • 2001 – The Zoo Father shortlisted for T. S. Eliot Prize
  • 2005 – The Huntress shortlisted for T. S. Eliot Prize
  • 2005 – Arts Council England Grants for the Arts Award
  • 2006 – Arts Council England Grants for the Arts Award
  • 2006 – Society of Author's Author's Foundation Award
  • 2007–09 – Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Middlesex University
  • 2010 – What the Water Gave Me shortlisted for T. S. Eliot Prize
  • 2011 – What the Water Gave Me shortlisted for Wales Book of the Year
  • 2011 – Royal Literary Fund Fellowship at Courtauld Institute of Art
  • 2013 – Manchester Poetry Prize for five poems from Fauverie{{Cite web |title=Winners | Manchester Poetry Prize | Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU) |url=http://www.manchesterwritingcompetition.co.uk/archive/2013poetry/winners.php |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170309065623/http://www.manchesterwritingcompetition.co.uk/archive/2013poetry/winners.php |archive-date=9 March 2017 |access-date=8 March 2017 |df=dmy-all}}
  • 2014 – Fauverie shortlisted for T. S. Eliot Prize
  • 2015 – Cholmondeley Award"[http://www.societyofauthors.org/Prizes/Poetry/Cholmondeley/Past-winners Past winners of the Cholmondeley Awards"]. Society of Authors. Accessed 15 March 2018.
  • 2016 – Arts Council England Grants for the Arts Award
  • 2017 – Mama Amazonica was Poetry Book Society Choice
  • 2018 – Mama Amazonica won the Ondaatje Prize
  • 2018 – Mama Amazonica shortlisted for Roehampton Poetry Prize
  • 2018 – Literature Matters Award from the Royal Society of Literature
  • 2018 – Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
  • 2020 – Indian Paradise Flycatcher won Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry{{Cite web |title=Keats-Shelley Prize 2020 |url=https://keats-shelley.org/prizes/keats_shelley_prize_2020 |access-date=2021-06-06 |website=keats-shelley.org}}
  • 2020 – Mama Amazonica won the inaugural Laurel Prize for Poetry{{cite web |title=2020 Winners |url=https://laurelprize.com/2020-winners/ |access-date=9 April 2021 |website=Laurel Prize for Poetry in Association with Poetry School}}
  • 2020 – Tiger Girl shortlisted for Forward Prize for Best Collection
  • 2021 – Tiger Girl shortlisted for Wales Book of the Year (Poetry)

Bibliography

{{Incomplete list|date=July 2020}}

= Poetry collections<!-- Incorporate bibliographic info from citations into main entries, i.e. no need for these to be references.--> =

  • Icefall Climbing pamphlet (Smith Doorstop, 1994){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32509795|title=Icefall climbing|date=1994|publisher=Smith/Doorstep|isbn=978-1-869961-61-9|location=Huddersfield|language=English|oclc=32509795}}
  • Heart of a Deer (Enitharmon, 1998){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://search.proquest.com/lion/publication/publications_2051642|title=Heart Of a Deer.|date=1998|publisher=Enitharmon|isbn=978-1-900564-16-8|location=London|language=English|oclc=1167596628}}
  • The Zoo Father (Seren, 2001){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1170500661|title=The zoo father|date=2001|publisher=Seren|isbn=978-1-85411-305-4|location=Bridgend|language=English|oclc=1170500661}}
  • El Padre Zoológico/The Zoo Father (El Tucan, Mexico City, 2004){{Cite book|last1=Petit|first1=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1025527051|title=El padre zoológico = The zoo father|last2=Mejer|first2=Valerie|last3=Test|first3=E. M|date=2004|publisher=El Tucan de Virginia|isbn=978-968-6756-87-6|location=México DF|oclc=1025527051}}
  • The Huntress (Seren, 2005){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1170001478|title=The huntress|date=2005|publisher=Seren|isbn=978-1-85411-396-2|location=Bridgend|language=English|oclc=1170001478}}
  • The Wounded Deer: Fourteen poems after Frida Kahlo pamphlet (Smith Doorstop, 2005){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1172120161|title=The wounded deer: [fourteen poems after Frida Kahlo|date=2005|publisher=Smith/Doorstop Books|isbn=978-1-902382-75-3|location=Huddersfield|language=English|oclc=1172120161}}
  • The Treekeeper's Tale (Seren, 2008){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/213113734|title=The treekeeper's tale|date=2008|publisher=Seren|isbn=978-1-85411-471-6|location=Bridgend|language=English|oclc=213113734}}
  • What the Water Gave Me: Poems after Frida Kahlo (Seren, UK, 2010, Black Lawrence Press, US, 2011){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=http://qut.eblib.com.au/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1125074|title=What the Water Gave Me.|date=2013|publisher=Seren|isbn=978-1-78172-007-3|location=New York|language=English|oclc=1058276544}}
  • Fauverie (Seren, 2014){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1023220332|title=Fauverie.|date=2014|isbn=978-1-78172-168-1|language=English|oclc=1023220332}}
  • Mama Amazonica (Bloodaxe, 2017){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1027577069|title=Mama Amazonica|date=2017|publisher=Bloodaxe Books, Ltd.|language=English|oclc=1027577069}}
  • Tiger Girl (Bloodaxe, 2020){{Cite book|last=Petit|first=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1111792293|title=Tiger girl|date=2020|isbn=978-1-78037-526-7|language=English|oclc=1111792293}}

= Poems =

class='wikitable sortable'
width=25%|Title

!|Year

!|First published

!|Reprinted/collected

The Children's Asylum

|2003

|{{cite journal |author=Petit, Pascale |date=Jul–Aug 2003 |title=The Children's Asylum |journal=Quadrant |volume=47 |issue=7–8 [398] |pages=76}}

|

The feast

|2003

|{{cite journal |author=Petit, Pascale |date=Jul–Aug 2003 |title=The feast |journal=Quadrant |volume=47 |issue=7–8 [398] |pages=77}}

|

Portrait of my mother as Xipe Totec

|2003

|{{cite journal |author=Petit, Pascale |date=Jul–Aug 2003 |title=Portrait of my mother as Xipe Totec |journal=Quadrant |volume=47 |issue=7–8 [398] |pages=76}}

|

The mineral mother

|2003

|{{cite journal |author=Petit, Pascale |date=Jul–Aug 2003 |title=The mineral mother |journal=Quadrant |volume=47 |issue=7–8 [398] |pages=83}}

|

= Edited works (anthologies) =

  • Tying the Song Co-editor with Mimi Khalvati (Enitharmon, 2000){{Cite book|last1=Khalvati|first1=Mimi|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44152912|title=Tying the song: a first anthology from the Poetry School, 1997-2000|last2=Petit|first2=Pascale|last3=Poetry School (London|first3=England)|date=2000|publisher=Enitharmon Press; Distributed in the USA and Canada by Dufour Editions|isbn=978-1-900564-76-2|location=London; Chester Springs, PA|language=English|oclc=44152912}}
  • Poetry from Art at Tate Modern editor, pamphlet (Tate Publications, 2010){{Cite book|last1=Petit|first1=Pascale|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/903084777|title=Poetry from art: at Tate Modern|last2=Tate Modern (Gallery)|date=2010|language=English|oclc=903084777}}

———————

= Bibliography notes =

{{reflist|40em|group=lower-alpha}}

Critical studies and reviews of Petit's work

= ''Mama Amazonica'' =

  • {{cite journal |author=Van Hek, Lin |authorlink=Lin Van Hek |date=Jan–Feb 2018 |title=Poetry of wildness |journal=Quadrant |volume=62 |issue=1–2 [543] |pages=85–86}}
  • [https://www.ft.com/content/e2b45468-5d05-11e8-9334-2218e7146b04 Financial Times, 25 May 2018, In Praise of Pascale Petit, a poet breaking into new territory by Nilanjana Roy]

References

{{Reflist}}