Skip to main content.
  • Faculty + Staff
  • Alumni/ae
  • Families
  • Students
Bard
  • Bard
  • Academics sub-menuAcademics
    • Academics
      • Programs and Divisions
      • Structure of the Curriculum
      • Courses
      • Requirements
      • Academic Calendar
      • Faculty
      • College Catalogue
      • Bard Abroad
      • Libraries
      • Dual-Degree Programs
      • Bard Conservatory of Music
      • Other Study Opportunities
      • Graduate Programs
      • Early Colleges
  • Admission sub-menuAdmission
    • Applying
      • Apply Now
      • Financial Aid
      • Tuition + Payment
      • Campus Tours
      • Meet Our Students + Alumni/ae
      • For Families / Para Familias
      • Join Our Mailing List
      • Contact Us
      • Link to Instagram @bardadmission
  • Campus Life sub-menuCampus Life
    • Living on Campus
      • Housing + Dining
      • Campus Resources
      • Get Involved on Campus
      • Visiting + Transportation
      • Athletics + Recreation
      • Montgomery Place Campus
      • Current Students
      • New Students
  • Civic Engagement sub-menuCivic Engagement
    • Bard CCE The Center for Civic Engagement (CCE) at Bard College embodies the fundamental belief that education and civil society are inextricably linked.

      Take action.
      Make an impact.

      • Get Involved
      • Engaged Learning
      • Student Leadership
      • Grow Your Network
      • About CCE
      • Our Partners
  • Newsroom sub-menuNews + Events
    • News + Events
      • Newsroom
      • Events Calendar
      • Press Releases
      • Office of Communications
    • Special Events
      • Commencement + Reunion
      • Fisher Center + SummerScape
      • Family and Alumni/ae Weekend
      • Athletic Events
    • Join the Conversation
      • Link to Facebook @bardcollegeny  Link to Twitter/X @bardcollege   Link to Instagram @bardcollege  Link to Threads @bardcollege  Link to YouTube @bardcollege

  • About Bard sub-menuAbout Bard
    • About Bard College
      • Bard History
      • Campus Tours
      • Employment
      • Visiting Bard
      • Support Bard
      • Inclusive Excellence
      • Sustainability
      • Title IX and Nondiscrimination
      • Board of Trustees
      • Bard Abroad
      • Open Society University Network
      • The Bard Network
  • Give
  • Search

News and Events

Written Arts Menu
  • The Program
  • Our People
    • Faculty
    • Students
  • Requirements + Courses
  • Workshops
  • Audio Archive
  • News + Events
  • Resources
  • Home

Bard College Student Samantha Barrett ’26 Wins 2025 PEN/Robert J Dau Short Story Prize

Written arts major Samantha Barrett ’26 has won the 2025 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers for her story “Invert.” This award recognizes 12 emerging writers each year for their debut short story published in a literary magazine, journal, or cultural website, and aims to support the launch of their careers as fiction writers. Each winner receives a $2,000 cash prize and is published by Catapult in their annual anthology, Best Debut Short Stories: The PEN America Dau Prize.

Bard College Student Samantha Barrett ’26 Wins 2025 PEN/Robert J Dau Short Story Prize

Bard written arts major Samantha Barrett ’26 has won the 2025 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers. This award recognizes 12 emerging writers each year for their debut short story published in a literary magazine, journal, or cultural website, and aims to support the launch of their careers as fiction writers. Chosen for originality, craft, and pushing the boundaries of the genre, each winner receives a $2,000 cash prize and is published by Catapult in their annual anthology, Best Debut Short Stories: The PEN America Dau Prize. This year’s judges—Lydi Conklin, Dionne Irving, Brenda Peynado—selected the winning stories from a range of dynamic literary publications. 

Barrett’s prize-winning story “Invert” was published by Foglifter Journal, issue 9.1 (2024) and nominated by the journal’s editors for the PEN award. Barrett will attend the 61st annual PEN America Literary Awards Ceremony on May 8 in New York City, where over 20 distinct awards, fellowships, grants, prizes, and nearly $350,000 will be conferred to writers and translators.

“I'm deeply honored to receive this award, and incredibly excited to attend this ceremony along with some of the most promising up-and-coming writers of today,” said Barrett.

The PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers is generously supported by the family of the late Robert J. Dau, whose commitment to the literary arts made him a fitting namesake for this career-launching prize. Before his death, Robert J. Dau, a lifelong Michigan resident, requested that a prize be established to promote budding writers. He knew that Ernest Hemingway spent summers with his family in northern Michigan and was a contemporary of Dau’s mother. Hemingway spent a winter writing in Dau’s hometown of Petoskey, and Robert loved Hemingway’s connection to his hometown. He also loved that Hemingway wrote his Nick Adams stories about places he knew personally. Dau’s admiration for Hemingway resulted in the creation of the PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers.
Read more at PEN

Post Date: 05-06-2025

NYT Opinion: “This Is How Universities Can Escape Trump’s Trap, If They Dare,” Writes M. Gessen

In an opinion piece for the New York Times, M. Gessen, distinguished visiting writer at Bard, asserts that the way universities can fight against the Trump administration’s attacks is to abandon concerns of rankings, endowment building, and campus amenities to “focus on their core mission: the production and dissemination of knowledge.” Gessen spoke to Bard College President Leon Botstein because he “has long practiced the approach I am advocating.”

NYT Opinion: “This Is How Universities Can Escape Trump’s Trap, If They Dare,” Writes M. Gessen

In an opinion piece for the New York Times, M. Gessen, distinguished visiting writer at Bard, asserts that the way universities can fight against the Trump administration’s attacks is to abandon concerns of rankings, endowment building, and campus amenities to “focus on their core mission: the production and dissemination of knowledge.” Gessen spoke to Bard College President Leon Botstein because he “has long practiced the approach I am advocating” and “seems to respond to every crisis by figuring out ways to teach more people”—citing the Bard Prison Initiative, Bard Early Colleges, and Bard Microcolleges as some examples of the College’s mission-driven expansion of higher education beyond traditional pathways. Botstein believes universities are essential to democracy as “portals to tolerance and the expression of fundamental equality of all human beings.” Gessen challenges other universities to: “Act like universities, not like businesses. Spend your endowments. Accept more, not fewer students. Open up your campuses and expand your reach not by buying real estate but by bringing education to communities. Create a base. Become a movement.”
Read in New York Times

Post Date: 04-14-2025

Poetry Collection by Juliana Spahr ’88 Featured in the Washington Post

Christopher Kondrich included Spahr’s most recent collection, Ars Poeticas, in a list of four books of poetry that “help restore nuance to our chaotic world.” Kondrich describes Ars Poeticas as a collection about poetry’s ability to respond to social and environmental crises.

Poetry Collection by Juliana Spahr ’88 Featured in the Washington Post

A new book of poetry by alumna Juliana Spahr ’88 was featured in the Washington Post. Christopher Kondrich included Spahr’s most recent collection, Ars Poeticas, in a list of four books of poetry that “help restore nuance to our chaotic world.” Kondrich describes Ars Poeticas as a collection about poetry’s ability to respond to social and environmental crises. “We can’t help but wonder what poetry could ever add to the efforts to address [issues like] climate change and right-wing populism. With Ars Poeticas, the answer, despite Spahr’s reservations, is a tremendous amount.” Spahr has published nine books of poetry, the first in 1994. She was the recipient of the OB Hardison Poetry Prize from the Folger Shakespeare Library in 2009.
Read the Feature

Post Date: 04-01-2025
More News
  • Joseph O’Neill Interviewed by the New York Review of Books on the State of US Democracy

    Joseph O’Neill Interviewed by the New York Review of Books on the State of US Democracy

    Daniel Drake interviewed Distinguished Visiting Professor of Written Arts Joseph O’Neill for the New York Review of Books, speaking to O’Neill about his assessment of the state of authoritarianism and resistance in the United States. “The end of the rule of law does not mean that we automatically find ourselves in an authoritarian society,” O’Neill said, but cautioned Democrats against being “distracted by the past.” “The (dubious) strategies hatched by their consultants in response to Trump’s win—‘talk about egg prices,’ ‘work with Republicans,’ and so on—make even less sense than usual,” O’Neill said. “New strategies, new faces, and a new level of adversarial exertion will be required.”
    Read More in the New York Review of Books

    Post Date: 03-25-2025
  • Opinion: “Putin Is Ready to Carve Up the World” Writes M. Gessen for the New York Times

    Opinion: “Putin Is Ready to Carve Up the World” Writes M. Gessen for the New York Times

    In an opinion piece for the New York Times published on the same day Zelensky’s Oval Office meeting with Trump and Vance collapsed, Distinguished Visiting Writer M. Gessen wrote, “Putin has wanted to carve the globe up for a long time. Now, at last, Trump is handing him the knife.” As a Russian exile, Gessen asserts that Putin’s “negotiations with President Trump about Ukraine are not just about Ukraine. Putin wants nothing less than to reorganize the world, the way Joseph Stalin did with the accords he reached with Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in the Crimean city of Yalta in February 1945.” Although what will happen now in Ukraine is uncertain, Gessen predicts if Russia moves to unleash its aggression against Europe, it will not look like “the bipolar world of the second half of the 20th century” or like “the world in which we have been living and in which the populations of most of the world’s wealthy countries have felt safe.”
    Read in the New York Times

    Post Date: 03-04-2025
  • Dinaw Mengestu Interviewed in World Literature Today

    Dinaw Mengestu Interviewed in World Literature Today

    Dinaw Mengestu, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of the Humanities and director of the Written Arts Program at Bard College, was interviewed in World Literature Today about his latest novel, Someone Like Us. “In this brilliant novel, both mystery and meditation, Mengestu challenges that dominant narrative with a multiplicity of stories which make it impossible for us to look away,” writes Renee H. Shea for World Literature Today. Mengestu spoke with Shea about how questions of ethics and representation appear in his work, how photographs taken by his wife appear throughout the text to offer another narrative within the novel, and how he approaches physical and geographical movement of his characters across time, place, continent, and cultures. “The novel is not just about seeing that community in one moment in time but over the course of an entire generation,” Mengestu said. “Looking more deeply into that world is the heart of this story, and in many ways this is the community that I wanted to reach out to the most.”
     
    Read the Full Interview with Dinaw Mengestu

    Post Date: 02-25-2025
  • Dinaw Mengestu’s Someone Like Us Named One of Obama’s Favorite Books of 2024

    Dinaw Mengestu’s Someone Like Us Named One of Obama’s Favorite Books of 2024

    The latest book by Dinaw Mengestu, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of the Humanities and director of the Written Arts Program at Bard College, has been featured on a list of art that inspired former president Barack Obama in 2024. Mengestu’s novel, Someone Like Us, tells the story of the son of Ethiopian immigrants who seeks to understand a hidden family history and uncovers a past colored by unexpected loss, addiction, and the enduring emotional pull toward home. In exploring this history, he begins to understand that perhaps the only chance he has of saving his family and making it back home is to confront not only the unresolved mystery around his father’s life and death, but his own troubled memories, and the years spent masking them.
    Obama's Favorite Films, Books, and Music of 2024

    Post Date: 01-06-2025
  • Annual Bard Fiction Prize Is Awarded to Maya Binyam

    Annual Bard Fiction Prize Is Awarded to Maya Binyam

    Author Maya Binyam has received the Bard Fiction Prize for her first novel, Hangman (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023). Binyam’s residency at Bard College is for the fall 2025 semester, during which time she will continue her writing and meet informally with students. Binyam will give a public reading at Bard during her residency.

    The Bard Fiction Prize committee writes: “Maya Binyam’s novel Hangman intrigues from its opening sentence as it builds a mysterious Beckettesque world of dark comic disorientation, never allowing the reader to grow complacent as it explores the essence of belonging and displacement. Cain’s infamous question to God in Genesis echoes in the reader’s mind as we watch Binyam’s unnamed narrator strive to be his brother’s finder, encountering innumerable obstacles in his once-familiar homeland. This existential quest makes us rebuild our assumptions from the ground up: what is a refugee? What is a family? How do we find our way home? Binyam builds a universe of alluring elusivity with consummate authority.”

    “I’m honored and overjoyed to have been read so generously by the judges of the Bard Fiction Prize,” said Binyam. “Novel writing, for me, is fundamentally mysterious, strange, and almost impossible. This recognition makes it feel more possible, and inevitable, too. I’m very excited to join Bard’s literary community in the fall, and am beyond grateful for the opportunity to work on my second novel alongside its students and faculty. Knowing I’ll have this time to write is a dream.”

    Maya Binyam’s novel Hangman, which was named a 2024 National Book Foundation “5 under 35” honoree, received the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and was longlisted for the Women’s Prize and Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award. Her work has appeared in the Paris Review, the New Yorker, Best American Short Stories, and elsewhere. She is currently a Visiting Lecturer in Literature at Claremont McKenna College. She lives in Los Angeles.

    The creation of the Bard Fiction Prize, presented each October since 2001, continues Bard’s long-standing position as a center for creative, groundbreaking literary work by both faculty and students. From Saul Bellow, William Gaddis, Mary McCarthy, and Ralph Ellison to John Ashbery, Philip Roth, William Weaver, and Chinua Achebe, Bard’s literature faculty, past and present, represents some of the most important writers of our time. The prize is intended to encourage and support young writers of fiction, and provide them with an opportunity to work in a fertile intellectual environment. The 2024 Bard Fiction Prize was awarded to Zain Khalid for his first novel, Brother Alive (Grove Press 2022).
    Read more on the Bard Fiction Prize website.

    Post Date: 10-14-2024
  • Internationally Renowned Writer Joyce Carol Oates Will Give a Reading at Bard College on October 21

    Internationally Renowned Writer Joyce Carol Oates Will Give a Reading at Bard College on October 21

    On Monday, October 21, at 4 pm, internationally renowned writer Joyce Carol Oates will give a reading at Bard College in the Chapel of the Holy Innocents. Oates is a recipient of the National Humanities Medal, the National Book Critics Circle Ivan Sandrof Life Achievement Award, the National Book Award, the Jerusalem Prize for Lifetime Achievement, the Prix Femina, the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Art of the Short Story, and the Cino Del Duca World Prize, among many other honors. She has written some of the most enduring fiction of our time, including the national best sellers We Were the Mulvaneys, Blonde, and the New York Times best seller The Falls.

    The reading, which is being presented as part of Bradford Morrow’s course on innovative contemporary fiction, is free and open to the public. With Morrow, Oates is co-editing Conjunctions:83, Revenants, The Ghost Issue, which will be published in November. Revenants will bring together fiction and poetry on the “unliving-living” by a wide array of esteemed writers, such as Margaret Atwood, Carmen Maria Machado, Ben Okri, Paul Tremblay, Stephen Graham Jones, Patricia Smith, Valerie Martin, Jonathan Carroll, Reggie Oliver, James Morrow, Can Xue, Brian Evenson, Paul Muldoon, and others.

    Joyce Carol Oates is the Roger S. Berlind ’52 Distinguished Professor of the Humanities Emerita at Princeton University and has been a member of The American Academy of Arts and Letters since 1978.

    Post Date: 09-24-2024

Written Arts Events

There are no events to display.
2025
  
2024
  
2023
  
2022


2023

Wednesday, December 20, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Monday, December 18, 2023
  Campus Center, Weis Cinema  7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Come take a study break with us, for whatever time you can spare, to have some treats and hear the works of:

Sophie Deerberg
Alyssa Henderson
Nathan Kagan
Julian Kwiatowski
Amber O'Halloran
Amber O'Hanley
Ewan O'Sullivan
Oliver Plass
Teddie Silver
Jenny Simpson
Cindy Qu


Wednesday, December 13, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Thursday, December 7, 2023
Campus Center, Weis Cinema  10:30 am – 1:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Sally Wen Mao is the author of the poetry collection The Kingdom of Surfaces (Graywolf Press, 2023), and the debut fiction collection Ninetails (Penguin Books, May 2024). She is also the author of two previous poetry collections, Oculus (Graywolf Press, 2019), a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and Mad Honey Symposium (Alice James Books, 2014). Her work has appeared in the Paris Review, Granta, Poetry, A Public Space, Harpers Bazaar, the Washington Post, Guernica, and others. The recipient of two Pushcart Prizes and a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, she was recently a Cullman Fellow at the New York Public Library and a Shearing Fellow at the Black Mountain Institute. 

Read more about Sally's work here. 


Wednesday, December 6, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Wednesday, November 29, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Wednesday, November 22, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Livestream of Lecture and Q&A with Boris Dralyuk, Renowned Poet, Translator, and Former Editor-in-Chief of the LA Review of Books
Ottaway Theater  10:10 am – 11:30 am EST/GMT-5
Boris Dralyuk will give a talk titled “The Mova-Tongue: Hybrid Identities and Semi-Parodic Patriotism in Poems from Ukraine,” livestreamed at Ottaway Theater. This will be followed by a Q&A/discussion.


Wednesday, November 15, 2023
  A student-made radio comedy series, with new episodes every Wednesday!
Online Event  Starring professors Benjamin Hale and John Burns, Don't Worry is a student-made, six-episode radio comedy series. Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube on Wednesdays to hear the story of Lucas Hart, the problem. 

Sign Up for Notifications for New Episodes

Lucas Hart has a problem: Everything he's afraid of actually happens. So he's been living on an iceberg in who-knows-where, Alaska, where he can't cause any problems—until the Alaskan police deem him mentally unstable and ship him off to live with his estranged sister. Who owns a ski resort facing a dozen lawsuits. Who is marrying a world-record-holder for concussions. And who hates his guts. What could possibly go wrong?

Finally facing his past of running away as a child and leaving his little sister behind, Lucas resolves to patch things up. He teams up with a slimy ex-psychologist-turned-psychic-scam-artist who promises to help him get rid of his condition. In the meantime, can Lucas repair his relationship with his sister without destroying her wedding, her ski resort, and her whole life in the process?

We are Bard students and we need your support! Episodes are available every Wednesday! Click the link below to be notified of new releases.


Monday, November 6, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
On Monday, November 6 at 6pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), Nicole Sealey will read from her work. She will be introduced by poet and Bard College faculty member, Jenny Xie. The reading will be followed by a discussion moderated by Dawn Lundy Martin, Distinguished Writer in Residence at Bard College.

Nicole Sealey was born in St. Thomas, U.S.V.I. and raised in Apopka, Florida. She is the author of Ordinary Beast, finalist for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award and the PEN Open Book Award, and The Animal After Whom Other Animals Are Named, winner of the Drinking Gourd Chapbook Poetry Prize. An excerpt from her forthcoming collection, The Ferguson Report: An Erasure, was awarded the Forward Prize for Best Single Poem. Her honors include a 2023-2024 Cullman Center Fellowship from the New York Public Library, a Rome Prize in Literature from the American Academy in Rome, a Hodder Fellowship from Princeton University, the Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize from The American Poetry Review, and fellowships from CantoMundo, Cave Canem, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Her work has appeared in various journals and anthologies including The New Yorker, Poetry London, and The Best American Poetry (2018 and 2021). She was the Executive Director at Cave Canem Foundation from 2017–2019. She is a visiting professor at Boston University and teaches in the MFA Writers Workshop in Paris program at New York University.

Read more about Nicole's work here. 


Thursday, November 2, 2023
Ann Goldstein, translator
Jenny McPhee, NYU
Daniel Mendelsohn, Bard College
Mark Polizzotti, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Campus Center, Weis Cinema  5:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
What happens when translation falters and languages cannot be reconciled? What is irremediably “foreign” in a foreign language, culture, literature and art? How to transform this challenge into a creative resource? 
We ask these probing questions to four of the most prominent literary translators of today, to learn from their experiences and struggles, as well as their successes.

Ann Goldstein is a translator from the Italian language, best known for her celebrated translations of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Quartet. Former editor of The New Yorker, her many translations include works from Alba de Cespedes, Elsa Morante, Giacomo Leopardi, Jhumpa Lahiri. She also edited the three-volume publication of The Complete Works of Primo Levi (2015).
 
Jenny McPhee teaches in the Master’s in Translation and Interpreting program at NYU and in the Creative Writing Program at Princeton. Author of several novels, her translations from the Italian include works by the authors Anna Banti, Natalia Ginzburg, Primo Levi, Elsa Morante, Anna Maria Ortese, Curzio Malaparte, and Pope John Paul II.

Daniel Mendelsohn is the Charles Ranlett Flint Professor of Humanities at Bard College. An internationally bestselling author, critic, essayist, and translator, his notable works include An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic (2017), and The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million (2006). His translation of Homer’s Odyssey will be published next year.
 
Mark Polizzotti is a publisher and editor-in-chief at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. He has translated more than 50 books from the French, including works by Gustave Flaubert, Marguerite Duras and André Breton, and written 11 books, the latest of which is Sympathy for the Traitor: A Translation Manifesto (2018). 

Moderated by Marina van Zuylen (Bard) and Franco Baldasso (Bard).


Thursday, November 2, 2023
A Talk with Dr. Sandra Joy Russell
Avery/Ottaway auditorium  10:10 am – 11:30 am EDT/GMT-4
Comparative literature and women's and gender studies scholar Sandra Joy Russell will lead us in a discussion of contemporary Ukrainian poetry, including works by a number of Queer poets and activists. Presented as part of the Common Course on "Ukraine and Decolonial Thought," but welcome to all!


Thursday, October 26, 2023
A Reading & Ghazal Workshop with Sahar Muradi
Campus Center, Weis Cinema  10:30 am EDT/GMT-4
On Thursday, October 26, at 10:30 am in Weis Cinema, Sahar Muradi will read from her debut poetry collection OCTOBERS (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2023). The book touches on experiences of migration, empire, and loss, and looks at language as anchor, home, suspect, and, ultimately, a source of wild wonder. Reading and short discussion will be followed by a workshop exploring the subversive and liberatory qualities of the 7th century poetic form, the ghazal. 

Sahar Muradi is author of the collection OCTOBERS, selected by Naomi Shihab Nye for the 2022 Donald Hall Prize for Poetry and a finalist for the National Poetry Series. She is author of the chapbook [ G A T E S ], the hybrid memoir Ask Hafiz (winner of the 2021 Patrons’ Prize for Emerging Artists from Thornwillow Press), and the chaplet A Garden Beyond My Hand.  She is co-editor, with Seelai Karzai, of EMERGENC(Y): Writing Afghan Lives Beyond the Forever War, An Anthology of Writing from Afghanistan and its Diaspora; and, with Zohra Saed, of One Story, Thirty Stories: An Anthology of Contemporary Afghan American Literature. Sahar is the recipient of a Sustainable Arts Foundation Award in Poetry, a Stacy Doris Memorial Poetry Award, and twice recipient of the Himan Brown Poetry Award. Her writing has been supported by the Asian American Writers’ Workshop, Bethany Arts Community, Blue Mountain Center, Kundiman, and WOC Writers. She is cofounder of the Afghan American Artists & Writers Association, directs the arts education programs at City Lore, and dearly believes in the bottom of the rice pot. 

Read more about Sahar's work at saharmuradi.com.


Monday, October 23, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, October 23 at 6 pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), Adam Shatz will read from his work. He will be introduced by Dinaw Mengestu, director of the Written Arts Program and the Center for Ethics and Writing. 

Adam Shatz, a visiting professor at Bard College in the Human Rights Program, is the US editor of the London Review of Books and a contributor to the New York Times magazine, the New York Review of Books, the New Yorker, and other publications. He is the author of Writers and Missionaries: Essays on the Radical Imagination and the host of the podcast Myself with Others. His biography of Frantz Fanon, The Rebel’s Clinic, will be published by Farrar, Straus, and Giroux in January 2024. 

Read more about Adam's work here. 


Monday, October 23, 2023
Keijiro Suga, University of Minnesota/Meiji University
Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
I am a poet, but before being a poet, I was a translator, and I still am. Having published translations in the humanities and literature from English, French, and Spanish to Japanese, my verbal matrix of creation has been shaped by translation, through translation. This talk will reveal some of my secrets and ultimately the meaning of Japan's modernity for its language.

Keijiro Suga is currently the visiting chair of Asian Studies at the University of Minnesota. He is professor of critical theory at Meiji University in Tokyo, where his research focuses on the analysis of cultural production in contemporary global society. The author of ten books of essays and a prolific translator from English, Spanish, and French, he was awarded the prestigious Yomiuri Prize for Literature in 2009 for his travelogue Transversal Journeys.


Monday, October 2, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, October 2 at 6 pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), Isabella Hammad will read from her work. She will be introduced by Middle Eastern Studies Director Ziad Dallal. The reading will be followed by a discussion moderated by Dinaw Mengestu, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of the Humanities and director of the Written Arts Program. 

Isabella Hammad is the author of The Parisian and Enter Ghost. She was awarded the 2018 Plimpton Prize for Fiction, an O. Henry Award, the Sue Kaufman Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Palestine Book Award and a Betty Trask Award, and she was a National Book Foundation “5 under 35.” Her work has been supported with fellowships from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, and the Columbia University Institute for Ideas and Imagination, and she has taught literature and creative writing at NYU, Brown, and Al Quds Bard College. In 2023, she was included in the Granta Best of Young British Novelists list.

Read more about Isabella's work here. 


Monday, September 25, 2023
Shafer House  6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Meet faculty and other student writers, and ask questions about workshops and Moderation.

The Written Arts Program welcomes any and all interested students to an open house in Shafer House. Members of the faculty will be in attendance to answer any specific questions you may have and/or to talk with you generally about workshops, Moderation, and Senior Projects.

Enjoy the waterfall and have some refreshments as you chat with other student writers about their experiences in the program and Senior Projects.

Shafer House (9 Cedar Hill Road) is located at the Annandale Triangle on south campus. 


Friday, September 22, 2023
Honoring the Memory of the Late Chinua Achebe (1930–2013)
Campus Center, Weis Cinema  2:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Join us for After Chinua Achebe: African Writing and the Future, an event honoring the memory of the late Chinua Achebe (1930–2013), former Charles P. Stevenson Jr. Professor of Languages and Literature. 

A symposium in the afternoon in the Weis Cinema at the Bertelsmann Campus Center will examine the current flowering of writing by African authors, in Africa and in the diaspora. The symposium will be followed by the dedication of a room in the Stevenson Library at Bard in memory of Achebe.

The event will begin at 2:00 pm on Friday, September 22, with a dance performance by Souleymane Badolo celebrating the life of Achebe, followed by an opening address by President Leon Botstein. There will be two panel discussions, Writing Beyond Africa: The African imagination in the diaspora at 2:30 pm, and Activism and the Word: Writing, speech, and song in African political culture at 4 pm. Confirmed panelists include the novelists Nuruddin Farah, Teju Cole, Dinaw Mengestu, and Fatin Abbas, and the musician and activist DJ Switch. 

The event is sponsored by President's Office, the Hannah Arendt Center, the Stevenson Library, Africana Studies, and the Offices of the Dean and Alumni/ae Affairs. Members of the Achebe family will be in attendance, and the event is free and open to the public.
 
Chinua Achebe was a groundbreaking Nigerian writer best known for his first and most influential novel, Things Fall Apart. He wrote numerous other books, including works of fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and children's books. Professor Achebe received more than 30 honorary degrees, as well as many awards for his work. From 1990 to 2009 he was the Charles P. Stevenson Jr. Professor of Languages and Literature at Bard College. 


Monday, September 18, 2023
Violet Kupersmith to Read from Recent Work
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  6:30 pm – 8:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, September 18 at 6:30 pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), Bard Fiction Prize winner Violet Kupersmith will read from her work. Introduced by Richard B. Fisher Family Professor of Literature and Writing Mary Caponegro, the reading is free and open to the public.

Violet Kupersmith is the author of the novel Build Your House Around My Body (Random House, 2021), and the short story collection The Frangipani Hotel (Spiegel & Grau, 2014). After graduating from Mount Holyoke College in 2011, Violet spent a year teaching English in Tra Vinh, Vietnam, on a Fulbright Fellowship. She was the 2015–2016 David T. K. Wong Fellow at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, and is the recipient of a 2022 fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Read some of Violet's work here. 


Tuesday, August 22, 2023
27 Henderson Cir Dr, Red Hook, NY 12571  3:30 pm – 5:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
¡Hola! La Voz is a Spanish magazine on campus that connects with the Hispanic community of eight counties in the Hudson Valley and serves Latinx students at Bard. ¿Would you like to work and do journalism with us? We invite you today 8/22 from 3:30–5:00 pm to La Voz's office in Albee's basement (next to security and South Hall) to learn more about the magazine! If you would like to attend over Zoom, please use the following link: https://bard.zoom.us/j/4761920217 


Monday, May 15, 2023
  Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:30 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, May 8th at 5pm and Monday, May 15th at 5:30pm, please join the Written Arts Program for two nights of senior readings! Written Arts seniors will be reading excerpts from their recently completed senior projects in fiction, poetry, narrative nonfiction, and hybrid forms, with introductory and closing remarks from Written Arts faculty. This event will be held in person in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC). All are welcome!

May 8th Readers
Soledad Aguilar-Colon
Rayelle Cato
Kc Chiucarello
Mina Dahl
Rasheeda Graham
Erica Infanger
Giacomo Milia
Marxe Orbach
Maddie Parker
Beritt Perdue
Bernard Pollara
Jess Berkun
Faye Thompson
Max Trosman

May 15th Readers
Dash Charlesworth
Zoe Collea
Andrei Dumitriu
Heather Garufi
MarQuel Horton
Sarah Hudes
Harmony Johnson Wicker
Sophia Lawder-Gill
Meadow Palmer
Sarame Sahgal
Tamar Mayer DeAngelis
Ava Schwartz
Melissa Sidley
Lily Taggart
Sylvie Winkler
Tallulah Woitach


Sunday, May 14, 2023
  Campus Center, Weis Cinema  7:00 pm – 10:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
A screening of the film 28 Days Later.


Thursday, May 4, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:30 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Thursday, May 4 at 5:30 pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), writers Zain Khalid and Kevin Holden will read from their work. Introduced by Bard faculty member Benjamin Hale, and followed by a Q&A, the reading is free and open to the public.

Zain Khalid’s writing has appeared in the New Yorker, n+1, the Believer, Astra Magazine, McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, and elsewhere. His debut novel, Brother Alive (Grove Atlantic, 2022), is a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle John Leonard Prize for best first book in any genre, and was named a best book of 2022 by Library Journal and other outlets. He is also the fiction editor at The Drift.

Kevin Holden is a poet, critic, and translator. He is the author of seven books and chapbooks of poetry, including Pink Noise (Nightboat Books, 2023), Solar (Fence Books, 2016), which won the Fence Modern Poets Prize, and Birch (Ahsahta Press, 2015), which won the Ahsahta Chapbook Award. His translations of poetry from French, German, and Russian have also been published, and he has recently completed a translation of Jean Daive’s L’Énonciateur Des Extrêmes, forthcoming from Black Square Editions. He has taught as a visiting fellow at Bard College and is currently the writer-in-residence of Kirkland House at Harvard and a junior fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows.

Benjamin Hale is the author of the novel The Evolution of Bruno Littlemore (Twelve, 2011) and the collection The Fat Artist and Other Stories (Simon & Schuster, 2016). He has received the Bard Fiction Prize, a Michener-Copernicus Award, and nominations for the Dylan Thomas Prize and the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award. His writing has appeared, among other places, in Conjunctions, Harper's Magazine, the Paris Review, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and has been anthologized in Best American Science and Nature Writing.


Monday, April 24, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, April 24 at 5pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), writer Christina Milletti will read from her work. Introduced by Mary Caponegro, and followed by a Q&A, the reading is free and open to the student body. 

Christina Milletti’s novel Choke Box: a Fem-Noir won the Juniper Prize for Fiction from the University of Massachusetts Press. Her fiction, articles, and reviews have appeared in many journals and anthologies, such as Best New American Voices, The Iowa Review, The Master's Review, Denver Quarterly, The Cincinnati Review, Studies in the Novel, Zeta, The Brooklyn Rail, American Letters & Commentary, Experimental Fiction and the Buffalo News (among other places). She is an Associate Professor of English at the University at Buffalo where she is currently the Executive Director of UB’s Humanities Institute. She also co-curates the Exhibit X Fiction Series, a reading series based at Hallwalls for students and the wider WNY community. Recently, she won the Patron’s Prize from Thornwillow Press who published her winning short story, “The Girling Season,” in a special letterpress chapbook edition. It is one of the stories in her new (almost completed) collection called Now You See Her.

Mary Caponegro is the Richard B. Fisher Family Professor in Literature and Writing at Bard. She is the author of the short story collections The Star Café, Five Doubts, The Complexities of Intimacy, and All Fall Down, as well as selected works in translation. Professor Caponegro is a contributor to The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Tin House, Black Warrior Review, Salt Hill, Epoch, Fairy Tale Review, Sulfur, Gargoyle, and Iowa Review, and is a contributing editor for Conjunctions. 

Read more about Christina's work here. 
 


Monday, April 17, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  6:00 pm – 7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Monday, April 17, at 6 pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), writer Sara Freeman will read from her work. Introduced by Bard faculty member Gabriella Lindsay, and followed by a Q&A, the reading is free and open to the public.

Sara Freeman is a Canadian-British writer based in the United States. She graduated from Columbia University with an MFA in fiction in 2013. At Columbia, she won the Henfield Prize for the best piece of short fiction by a graduate student. Her debut novel, Tides, published in 2022, was the winner of The Bridge Book Award and named one of the 100 Must-Read Books of 2022 by Time Magazine.

Gabriella Lindsay comes to Bard from New York University, where she was a postdoctoral teaching fellow in the Department of French Literature, Thought and Culture. She is the recipient of a Georges Lurcy Fellowship and numerous research fellowships and travel awards from NYU. Her work has appeared in Comparative Literature Studies (special issue), American Philosophical Association Blog, and Études littéraires africaines, and elsewhere. 

Read more about Sara's work here. 
 


Friday, April 7, 2023
Russian-Ukrainian war
Olin Humanities, Room 203  12:00 pm – 1:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
This teach-in will not only uncover some histories of Russian oppression and colonial domination within Ukrainian context, but will also include a panel discussion where students from other post-soviet countries will share their experience with Russification and how it affects their daily life.

Since the event is during lunch time, a free meal and drinks will be provided.

Looking forward to seeing you on Friday, April 7 in Olin 203!

RSVP


Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Fisher Center, Resnick Theater Studio  6:30 pm – 8:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Join us for a reading from Our Red Book, a global collection of personal histories about menstruation, bleeding, and not bleeding from voices of all ages and genders, gathered by the New York Times best-selling author Rachel Kauder Nalebuff. Rachel will be joined by contributers Somaah Haaland, Victoria Law, and Daaimah Mubashshir to read from and discuss the process of writing their own accounts, which span the subjects of gender, identity, bleeding behind bars, and how menstruation offers an immediate window into our lives. 

Rachel Kauder Nalebuff is a writer working at the intersection of oral history, performance, and public health. Her newest book is Our Red Book (Simon & Schuster, 2022). She is the author of Stages: on Dying, Working, and Feeling (Thick Press, 2020); coeditor of The Feminist Utopia Project (Feminist Press, 2015); and the editor of the New York Times bestselling My Little Red Book (Twelve Books, 2009). She teaches nonfiction writing at Yale University.

Somah Haaland is a queer Indigenous artist and community organizer from the Pueblos of Laguna and Jemez in New Mexico who currently resides in New York City.

Victoria Law is a freelance journalist and author focusing on Women’s Incarceration.

Daaimah Mubashshir is Bard’s Playwright-in-Residence. Her work has been commissioned by the Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis, and 3 Hole Press. She is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships, including the 2021 PlayCo Residency for Black Women Theatre Makers; 2020–22 WP Theater Lab Fellowship; 2019-22 Core Writer Fellowship (Playwrights Center, Minnesota), an Audrey Residency (New Georges), MacDowell Fellowship, and Foundation of Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant.


Monday, March 6, 2023
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
On Monday, March 6 at 5pm in the László Z. Bitó ’60 Auditorium, Reem-Kayden Center (RKC), poet and Bard faculty member Jenny Xie will read from her work. Introduced by Mary Caponegro, and followed by a Q&A, the reading is free and open to the student body. 

​Jenny Xie was born in Anhui province, China. She is the author of Eye Level, a finalist for the National Book Award and the recipient of the Walt Whitman Award of the Academy of American Poets and the Holmes National Poetry Prize from Princeton University, and The Rupture Tense, a finalist for the National Book Award. She has been supported by fellowships and grants from Civitella Ranieri Foundation, Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Kundiman, New York Foundation for the Arts, the Vilcek Foundation, and the Jerome Foundation. Her work has appeared in Poetry, Yale Review, American Poetry Review, New Republic, Tin House, and elsewhere. She has taught at Princeton and NYU, and is currently on faculty at Bard College. Jenny lives in New York City.

Mary Caponegro is the Richard B. Fisher Family Professor in Literature and Writing at Bard. She is the author of the short story collections The Star Café, Five Doubts, The Complexities of Intimacy, and All Fall Down, as well as selected works in translation. Professor Caponegro is a contributor to The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Tin House, Black Warrior Review, Salt Hill, Epoch, Fairy Tale Review, Sulfur, Gargoyle, and Iowa Review, and a contributing editor for Conjunctions. 

Read more about Jenny's work here.
 


Monday, February 27, 2023
  Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
The Written Arts program will be holding a moderation Q&A in RKC 103. Students intending to moderate into the Written Arts will have the opportunity to speak with faculty about the Moderation process and specific Written Arts requirements. Students intending to moderate into Written Arts this semester are required to attend this event. Those who are unable to attend are asked to please notify the program coordinator ([email protected]) in advance.


Discover more at Bard.

  • Division of Languages and Literature
  • Literature Program
  • Foreign Languages, Cultures, and Literature
Bard College
30 Campus Road, PO Box 5000
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York 12504-5000
Phone: 845-758-6822
Admission Email: [email protected]
Information For
Prospective Students
Current Employees
Alumni/ae 
Families
©2025 Bard College
Quick Links
Employment
Travel to Bard
Site Search
Support Bard
Bard IT Policies + Security
Bard has a long history of creating inclusive environments for all races, creeds, ethnicities, and genders. We will continue to monitor and adhere to all Federal and New York State laws and guidance.
Like us on Facebook
Follow Us on Instagram
Threads
Bluesky
YouTube