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'''Jane Draycott [[Royal Society of Literature|FRSL]]''' is a British [[poet]], artistic collaborator and poetry translator.<ref>[http://www.janedraycott.org.uk/ Profile at Official website]</ref> She was born in [[London]] in 1954 and studied at [[King's College London]] and the [[University of Bristol]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Poetry Archive online entry for Jane Draycott'' | url=
'''Jane Draycott''' [[Royal Society of Literature|FRSL]] is a British [[poet]], artistic collaborator (sound montages, etc) and poetry translator.<ref>[https://www.janedraycott.org.uk/ Profile at Official website]</ref> She was born in [[London]] in 1954 and studied at [[King's College London]] and the [[University of Bristol]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Poetry Archive online entry for Jane Draycott'' | url=
https://poetryarchive.org/poet/jane-draycott/ |access-date=2024-10-01}}</ref>  
https://poetryarchive.org/poet/jane-draycott/ |access-date=2024-10-01}}</ref>  
Draycott's fifth collection [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781800172593 ''The Kingdom''] was published in 2023 by [[Carcanet Press]].
Draycott's fifth collection [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781800172593 ''The Kingdom''] was published in 2023 by [[Carcanet Press]].
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==Translation, work in Dutch==
==Translation, work in Dutch==
Draycott's translation work<ref name="The Occupant, Carcanet 2016, PBS Recommendation">{{Cite web |title=''Modern Poetry in Translation - author biography'' | url=
Draycott's translation work<ref name="The Occupant, Carcanet 2016, PBS Recommendation">{{Cite web |title=''Modern Poetry in Translation - author biography'' | work=
Modern Poetry in Translation | url=
https://modernpoetryintranslation.com/poet/jane-draycott/ |access-date=2024-09-24}}</ref> includes a poetic version of the 14th century elegy '[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=1064 'Pearl']' - a [[Stephen Spender Prize]]-winner in 2008<ref>{{Cite web |title=''The Times Stephen Spender Prize 2008'' (winners) - Jane Draycott| url=https://www.stephen-spender.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Stephen_Spender_Prize_2008.pdf |access-date=2024-09-30}}</ref>  - and a collection of new translations of the 20th century artist and poet [[Henri Michaux]] '[https://tworiverspress.com/shop/storms-under-the-skin/ 'Storms Under the Skin']' (a [[Poetry Book Society]] Recommended Translation) published in 2017 by [[Two Rivers Press]]. In 2013, Draycott was Writer-in-Residence hosted by the [[Dutch Foundation for Literature]] in Amsterdam, researching poet [[Martinus Nijhoff]]'s modernist Dutch narrative ''Awater''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Poetry Society article online'': After Awater – Jane Draycott joins the trail | url=https://poetrysociety.org.uk/publications-section/poetry-news/after-awater-jane-draycott-joins-the-trail/ |access-date=2024-09-25}}</ref>
https://modernpoetryintranslation.com/poet/jane-draycott/ |access-date=2024-09-24}}</ref> includes a poetic version of the 14th century elegy '[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=1064 'Pearl']' - a [[Stephen Spender Prize]]-winner in 2008<ref>{{Cite web |title=''The Times Stephen Spender Prize 2008'' (winners) - Jane Draycott| url=https://www.stephen-spender.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Stephen_Spender_Prize_2008.pdf |access-date=2024-09-30}}</ref>  - and a collection of new translations of the 20th century artist and poet [[Henri Michaux]] '[https://tworiverspress.com/shop/storms-under-the-skin/ 'Storms Under the Skin']' (a [[Poetry Book Society]] Recommended Translation) published in 2017 by [[Two Rivers Press]]. In 2013, Draycott was Writer-in-Residence hosted by the [[Dutch Foundation for Literature]] in Amsterdam, researching poet [[Martinus Nijhoff]]'s modernist Dutch narrative ''Awater''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Poetry Society article online'': After Awater – Jane Draycott joins the trail | url=https://poetrysociety.org.uk/publications-section/poetry-news/after-awater-jane-draycott-joins-the-trail/ |access-date=2024-09-25}}</ref>


==Audio, Music==
==Audio, music==
Draycott was previously poet in residence at Henley's River and Rowing Museum, creating a millennium archive of audio interviews with the men and women working on the London Thames. She has recorded a number of her poems for The [[Poetry Archive]]<ref>[http://www.poetryarchive.org/ ''The Poetry Archive'']</ref> and is one of the poets featured in the national [https://poetrybyheart.org.uk/ ''Poetry By Heart''] anthology.<ref>{{Cite book|url=http://www.poetrybyheart.org.uk/|title=Poetry by Heart: Poems for Learning and Reciting|editor=Motion, Andrew; Blake, Julie; Sprackland, Jean; Dixon, Mike|date=2 October 2014|publisher=Viking|isbn=978-0241185544}}</ref>
Draycott was previously poet in residence at Henley's River and Rowing Museum, creating a millennium archive of audio interviews with the men and women working on the London Thames. She has recorded a number of her poems for The [[Poetry Archive]]<ref>[https://www.poetryarchive.org/ ''The Poetry Archive'']</ref> and is one of the poets featured in the national [https://poetrybyheart.org.uk/ ''Poetry By Heart''] anthology.<ref>{{Cite book|url=http://www.poetrybyheart.org.uk/|title=Poetry by Heart: Poems for Learning and Reciting|editor=Motion, Andrew; Blake, Julie; Sprackland, Jean; Dixon, Mike|date=2 October 2014|publisher=Viking|isbn=978-0241185544}}</ref>


Settings to music of Draycott's poems have included a setting for the award-winning choir [[Tenebrae (choir)|Tenebrae]] by composer [[Joanna Marsh]] of [https://joannamarsh.co.uk/product/in-winters-house-ttbarbb/ 'In Winter's House'] (originally commissioned as part of laureate Carol Ann Duffy's 'Carols for Christmas' for ''The Guardian'' December 2010), premiered at the [[Wigmore Hall]] in December 2019.
Settings to music of Draycott's poems have included a setting for the award-winning choir [[Tenebrae (choir)|Tenebrae]] by composer [[Joanna Marsh]] of [https://joannamarsh.co.uk/product/in-winters-house-ttbarbb/ 'In Winter's House'] (originally commissioned as part of laureate Carol Ann Duffy's 'Carols for Christmas' for ''The Guardian'' December 2010), premiered at the [[Wigmore Hall]] in December 2019.


==Literary Collaborations, Film==
==Literary collaborations, film==
Her collaborative work includes two collections from Two Rivers Press: [https://tworiverspress.com/shop/christina-the-astonishing/ ''Christina the Astonishing''] (1992), co-written with poet Lesley Saunders and illustrated by artist Peter Hay; and [https://tworiverspress.com/shop/tideway/ ''Tideway''] (2002), a sequence of poems written as part of a project with photographer Jaap Oepkes, documenting the lives of [[Company of Watermen and Lightermen|London's Company of Thames Watermen and women]], with artworks by artist Peter Hay (both collections republished in 2022 in the [https://tworiverspress.com/product-category/literature-and-memoir/illustrated-classics/ ''Two Rivers Classics''] series). Her poem from this collection, 'No. 3 from ''Uses for the Thames''', was shortlisted for the 2002 Forward Prize for Best Single Poem and features in the [https://poetrysociety.org.uk/product/london-is-open-poems-on-the-underground-95-set-of-six-posters/ Poems on the Underground 2016] series 'London is Open'.
Her collaborative work includes two collections from Two Rivers Press: [https://tworiverspress.com/shop/christina-the-astonishing/ ''Christina the Astonishing''] (1992), co-written with poet Lesley Saunders and illustrated by artist Peter Hay; and [https://tworiverspress.com/shop/tideway/ ''Tideway''] (2002), a sequence of poems written as part of a project with photographer Jaap Oepkes, documenting the lives of [[Company of Watermen and Lightermen|London's Company of Thames Watermen and women]], with artworks by artist Peter Hay (both collections republished in 2022 in the [https://tworiverspress.com/product-category/literature-and-memoir/illustrated-classics/ ''Two Rivers Classics''] series). Her poem from this collection, 'No. 3 from ''Uses for the Thames''', was shortlisted for the 2002 Forward Prize for Best Single Poem and features in the [https://poetrysociety.org.uk/product/london-is-open-poems-on-the-underground-95-set-of-six-posters/ Poems on the Underground 2016] series 'London is Open'.


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''Beginning to See the Light'' event at London's South Bank has been made into [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk_fd96gHLs a film by filmmaker Corinne Silva].
''Beginning to See the Light'' event at London's South Bank has been made into [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk_fd96gHLs a film by filmmaker Corinne Silva].


==Poetry prizes, Honours, Adjudication==
==Poetry prizes, honours, adjudication==
Draycott's debut poetry pamphlet ''No Theatre'' (Smith/Doorstop, 1997) was shortlisted for the [[Forward Prizes for Poetry|Forward Prize]] for Best First Collection, and her first full collection ''Prince Rupert's Drop''<ref>[http://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039755 ''Prince Rupert's Drop'']</ref> (OUP and [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/index.shtml Carcanet Press], 1999) was shortlisted two years later for the Forward Prize for Best Collection.
Draycott's debut poetry pamphlet ''No Theatre'' (Smith/Doorstop, 1997) was shortlisted for the [[Forward Prizes for Poetry|Forward Prize]] for Best First Collection, and her first full collection ''Prince Rupert's Drop''<ref>[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039755 ''Prince Rupert's Drop'']</ref> (OUP and [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/index.shtml Carcanet Press], 1999) was shortlisted two years later for the Forward Prize for Best Collection.


In 2002 she was the winner of the [[Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Keats-Shelley Prize 2002'' (winners) - Jane Draycott (Keats-Shelley Memorial Association)| url=
In 2002 she was the winner of the [[Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=''Keats-Shelley Prize 2002'' (winners) - Jane Draycott (Keats-Shelley Memorial Association)| url=
https://www.keats-shelley.org/prizes/the_keats_shelley_prize_2002
https://www.keats-shelley.org/prizes/the_keats_shelley_prize_2002
  |access-date=2024-09-30}}</ref> with the title poem of her second collection, [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039724 The Night Tree], and in 2004 she was nominated as one of the [[Poetry Book Society]]'s [http://books.guardian.co.uk/nextgenerationpoets/0%2C%2C1231558%2C00.html 'Next Generation'] poets. In 2009, her collection '[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039922 'Over']' was nominated for the [[T. S. Eliot Prize|T S Eliot Prize]], and in 2016 her next collection ''[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781784103002 The Occupant]'' was selected as a [[Poetry Book Society]] Recommendation.<ref name="The Occupant, Carcanet 2016, PBS Recommendation" />
  |access-date=2024-09-30}}</ref> with the title poem of her second collection, [https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039724 The Night Tree], and in 2004 she was nominated as one of the [[Poetry Book Society]]'s [https://www.theguardian.com/books/series/nextgenerationpoets 'Next Generation'] poets. In 2009, her collection '[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781903039922 'Over']' was nominated for the [[T. S. Eliot Prize|T S Eliot Prize]], and in 2016 her next collection ''[https://www.carcanet.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9781784103002 The Occupant]'' was selected as a [[Poetry Book Society]] Recommendation.<ref name="The Occupant, Carcanet 2016, PBS Recommendation" />


Draycott has served on judging panels for a number of literary prizes, including the [[T. S. Eliot Prize|T S Eliot Prize]], the Society of Authors' [[Vondel Prize]] for translation, the Edward Thomas Prize, The Troubadour International Poetry Prize, the Tower Poetry Competition (Christ Church Oxford), and all three of the UK [https://poetrysociety.org.uk/ Poetry Society]'s National Poetry Competition, Foyles Young Poets Awards, and Geoffrey Dearmer Prize.
Draycott has served on judging panels for a number of literary prizes, including the [[T. S. Eliot Prize|T S Eliot Prize]], the Society of Authors' [[Vondel Prize]] for translation, the Edward Thomas Prize, The Troubadour International Poetry Prize, the Tower Poetry Competition (Christ Church Oxford), and all three of the UK [https://poetrysociety.org.uk/ Poetry Society]'s National Poetry Competition, Foyles Young Poets Awards, and Geoffrey Dearmer Prize.


In 2020 Draycott was elected a Fellow of the [[Royal Society of Literature]] and in 2023 was awarded a [https://www2.societyofauthors.org/prizes/the-soa-awards/cholmondeley-awards/ Society of Authors Cholmondeley Award].
In 2020 Draycott was elected a Fellow of the [[Royal Society of Literature]]<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-09-01 |title=Draycott, Jane |url=https://rsliterature.org/fellows/jane-draycott/,%20https://rsliterature.org/fellows/jane-draycott/ |access-date=2025-07-07 |website=Royal Society of Literature |language=en-GB}}</ref> and in 2023 was awarded a [https://www2.societyofauthors.org/prizes/the-soa-awards/cholmondeley-awards/ Society of Authors Cholmondeley Award].
==Awards and Fellowships==
==Awards and fellowships==
* 1997 Forward Poetry Prize for Best First Collection - Shortlist (''No Theatre'')
* 1997 Forward Poetry Prize for Best First Collection - Shortlist (''No Theatre'')
* 1998 BBC Radio 3 Poem For Radio - winner, with Elizabeth James, music by Geoff Pollitt (''Sea Green I'')
* 1998 BBC Radio 3 Poem For Radio - winner, with Elizabeth James, music by Geoff Pollitt (''Sea Green I'')
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[[Category:Alumni of the University of Bristol]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Bristol]]
[[Category:English women poets]]
[[Category:English women poets]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature]]

Latest revision as of 00:15, 7 December 2025

Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Jane Draycott FRSL is a British poet, artistic collaborator (sound montages, etc) and poetry translator.[1] She was born in London in 1954 and studied at King's College London and the University of Bristol.[2] Draycott's fifth collection The Kingdom was published in 2023 by Carcanet Press.

Teaching

Draycott teaches as Senior Associate Tutor on Oxford University's MSt in Creative Writing, and until 2022 was Senior Lecturer in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University as well as a mentor on the Crossing Borders[3] creative writing initiative, set up by the British Council and Lancaster University. In addition to her work at Oxford and Lancaster, she was Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Oxford Brookes University 2004-06, as well as at Aston University in 2010-12 and Royal Holloway University of London 2021-22. In 2014-16 she was a Royal Literary Fund [RLF] Lector, becoming an Advisory Fellow in 2018 and appointed as an RLF Associate Fellow in 2022.

Translation, work in Dutch

Draycott's translation work[4] includes a poetic version of the 14th century elegy ''Pearl'' - a Stephen Spender Prize-winner in 2008[5] - and a collection of new translations of the 20th century artist and poet Henri Michaux ''Storms Under the Skin'' (a Poetry Book Society Recommended Translation) published in 2017 by Two Rivers Press. In 2013, Draycott was Writer-in-Residence hosted by the Dutch Foundation for Literature in Amsterdam, researching poet Martinus Nijhoff's modernist Dutch narrative Awater.[6]

Audio, music

Draycott was previously poet in residence at Henley's River and Rowing Museum, creating a millennium archive of audio interviews with the men and women working on the London Thames. She has recorded a number of her poems for The Poetry Archive[7] and is one of the poets featured in the national Poetry By Heart anthology.[8]

Settings to music of Draycott's poems have included a setting for the award-winning choir Tenebrae by composer Joanna Marsh of 'In Winter's House' (originally commissioned as part of laureate Carol Ann Duffy's 'Carols for Christmas' for The Guardian December 2010), premiered at the Wigmore Hall in December 2019.

Literary collaborations, film

Her collaborative work includes two collections from Two Rivers Press: Christina the Astonishing (1992), co-written with poet Lesley Saunders and illustrated by artist Peter Hay; and Tideway (2002), a sequence of poems written as part of a project with photographer Jaap Oepkes, documenting the lives of London's Company of Thames Watermen and women, with artworks by artist Peter Hay (both collections republished in 2022 in the Two Rivers Classics series). Her poem from this collection, 'No. 3 from Uses for the Thames', was shortlisted for the 2002 Forward Prize for Best Single Poem and features in the Poems on the Underground 2016 series 'London is Open'.

Other collaborative work includes several award-winning sound-compositions with poet Elizabeth James (Sea Green I and II - winner of BBC Radio 3 Poem for Radio 1998; A Glass Case for BBC R3 Between the Ears (1999), produced by Susan Roberts; and Rock Music for LBC radio, winner of a London Sound Art Award 2000, produced by Richard Shannon).

In 2010, Draycott was part of Simon Barraclough's Psycho Poetica, a collaborative multi-media event launched at the British Film Institute for the 50th anniversary of Alfred Hitchcock's seminal thriller, and in 2013 was one of ten poets commissioned by Barraclough for his BFI collaborative project Poets on Pasolini: A New Decameron. Her poem 'Who keeps observance in the fever room?' from Julia Bird's 2015 Beginning to See the Light event at London's South Bank has been made into a film by filmmaker Corinne Silva.

Poetry prizes, honours, adjudication

Draycott's debut poetry pamphlet No Theatre (Smith/Doorstop, 1997) was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection, and her first full collection Prince Rupert's Drop[9] (OUP and Carcanet Press, 1999) was shortlisted two years later for the Forward Prize for Best Collection.

In 2002 she was the winner of the Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry[10] with the title poem of her second collection, The Night Tree, and in 2004 she was nominated as one of the Poetry Book Society's 'Next Generation' poets. In 2009, her collection ''Over'' was nominated for the T S Eliot Prize, and in 2016 her next collection The Occupant was selected as a Poetry Book Society Recommendation.[4]

Draycott has served on judging panels for a number of literary prizes, including the T S Eliot Prize, the Society of Authors' Vondel Prize for translation, the Edward Thomas Prize, The Troubadour International Poetry Prize, the Tower Poetry Competition (Christ Church Oxford), and all three of the UK Poetry Society's National Poetry Competition, Foyles Young Poets Awards, and Geoffrey Dearmer Prize.

In 2020 Draycott was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature[11] and in 2023 was awarded a Society of Authors Cholmondeley Award.

Awards and fellowships

  • 1997 Forward Poetry Prize for Best First Collection - Shortlist (No Theatre)
  • 1998 BBC Radio 3 Poem For Radio - winner, with Elizabeth James, music by Geoff Pollitt (Sea Green I)
  • 1999 Forward Poetry Prize for Best Collection - Shortlist (Prince Rupert's Drop)
  • 2000 London Sound Art Award (LBC) - with Elizabeth James, prod. Richard Shannon (Rock Music)
  • 2002 Forward Poetry Prize for Best Single Poem - Shortlist (No. 3 from Uses for the Thames)
  • 2002 Keats Shelley Prize (The Night Tree)
  • 2004 Next Generation poet (Poetry Book Society)
  • 2004-2006 Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Oxford Brookes University
  • 2009 Hawthornden International Fellowship
  • 2009 T S Eliot Prize - Shortlist (Over)
  • 2020-2012 Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Aston University
  • 2011 Stephen Spender Prize for Pearl
  • 2012 National Poetry Competition - Second Prizewinner (Italy to Lord)
  • 2014 International Hippocrates Prize for Poetry and Medicine (The Return)
  • 2019 "TLS Mick Imlah Poetry Prize". - Second Prizewinner (In the bones of the disused gasometer)
  • 2021 Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Royal Holloway University of London
  • 2020 Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
  • 2023 Society of Authors Cholmondeley Award

Works

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  • Prince Rupert's Drop (Carcanet Press, 1999)
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  • The Night Tree (Carcanet Press, 2004)
  • Over (Carcanet Press, 2009)
  • Pearl (Carcanet Press, 2011)
  • The Occupant (Carcanet Press, 2016)
  • Storms Under the Skin: Selected Poems 1927-1954 Henri Michaux - translations (Two Rivers Press, 2017)
  • The Kingdom (Carcanet Press, 2022)

References

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  1. Profile at Official website
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  3. Crossing Borders Template:Webarchive
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  7. The Poetry Archive
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  9. Prince Rupert's Drop
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External links

Template:Authority control