Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Wright, Charles (Vol. 146) - Charles Wright with J. D. McClatchy (interview date Winter 1989)


Wright, Charles (Vol. 146) - Charles Wright with J. D. McClatchy (interview date Winter 1989)

Charles Wright with J. D. McClatchy (interview date Winter 1989)

SOURCE: “The Art of Poetry XLI: Charles Wright,” in Paris Review, Vol. 31, No. 113, Winter, 1989, pp. 185-221.

[In the following interview, Wright discusses his introduction to poetry and formative years, his artistic development and aesthetic concerns, and his approach to composing poetry.]

From his dust-jacket photographs, you might expect Charles Wright to be a dour man. In person, though, he gives a quite different impression—trim, elegant even in blue jeans, generous, with a Southerner's soft-spoken courtliness. Born in Pickwick Dam, Tennessee, in 1935, he grew up in the South and went to college there. And a few years ago, after a long spell of teaching at the University of California at Irvine, he returned to the South, as poet-in-residence at the University of Virginia.

Wright's work stands out among his generation of poets for the austere luxuriance of...

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