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Bollingen Prize



         


The Bollingen Prize, awarded every two years by the Bollingen Foundation, is a prestigious literary honor bestowed on a poet in recognition of the best book of new verse within the last two years, or for lifetime achievement. It rewards a cash prize, currently $25,000.

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Inception

The prize was first conceived and funded by a $10,000 grant from the Bollingen Foundation to the Library of Congress in 1948. The inaugural prize, chosen by a jury of Fellows in American Letters of the Library of Congress, was awarded to Ezra Pound for his famous collection of poems entitled The Pisan Cantos. This choice of a work by a committed Fascist sympathizer infuriated many people in Cold War America, and political pressure led Congress to end the Library of Congress involvement in the program and return the unused portion of the grant to the Bollingen Foundation in 1949. The Bollingen Foundation decided to continue the program, with the administrative tasks being handled by the Yale University Library. The prize was awarded annually from 1948 to 1963, and biennially from 1965 to present.

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Recipients

1949Ezra Pound
1950Wallace Stevens
1951John Crowe Ransom
1952Marianne Moore
1953Archibald MacLeish and William Carlos Williams
1954W. H. Auden
1955Léonie Adams and Louise Bogan
1956Conrad Aiken
1957Allen Tate
1958e. e. cummings
1959Theodore Roethke
1960Delmore Schwartz
1961Yvor Winters
1962John Hall Wheelock and Richard Eberhart
1963Robert Frost
1965Horace Gregory
1967Robert Penn Warren
1969John Berryman and Karl Shapiro
1971Richard Wilbur and Mona Van Duyn
1973James Merrill
1975Archie Randolph Ammons
1977David Ignatow
1979W. S. Merwin
1981Howard Nemerov and May Swenson
1983Anthony Hecht and John Hollander
1985John Ashbery and Fred Chappell
1987Stanley Kunitz
1989Edgar Bowers
1991Laura Riding Jackson and Donald Justin
1993Mark Strand
1995Kenneth Koch
1997Gary Snyder
1999Robert Creeley
2001Louise Gluck
2003Adrienne Rich




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