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10.09.08 - Course
Four Months - The Architecture of Language with Quincy Troupe. Waiting List
10.09.08 - Privately
Study Privately with Quincy Troupe. Waiting List
10.09.08 - Real-Time
Study in real-time via chat-room with Quincy Troupe. Waiting List
Quincy Troupe

 

 






Quincy Troupe

QUINCY TROUPE is the author of fourteen books, including seven volumes of poetry, the latest of which is Transcircularities: New and Selected Poems (Coffee House Press), selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the ten best books of poetry published in 2002. Transcircularities received the Binghamton University Milt Kessler Poetry Book Award in 2003 and was a finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize.

He is professor emeritus of Creative Writing and American and Caribbean Literature at the University of California, San Diego; the founding Editorial Director for Code Magazine; and former Artistic Director of "Artists on the Cutting Edge," a reading and performance series at the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego. He was the first official poet laureate of the State of Caligornia to be appointed by Governor Gray Davis.

Mr. Troupe is the recipient of two American Book Awards: in 1980 for his collection of poetry, Snake-Back Solos and in 1990 for in non-fiction for Miles: The Autobiography. In 1991, Troupe received the prestigious Peabody Award for co-producing and writing the radio series, The Miles Davis Radio Project, broadcast in seven parts in 1990 and aired on National Public Radio. He is the two-time winner of the Heavyweight Championship of Poetry (1994 and 1995) sponsored by the World Poetry Bout of Taos, New Mexico. He has been a featured poet on two PBS television series on poetry: The United States of Poetry (1996) and Bill Moyers' The Power of the Word (1989), for which Mr. Troupe's segment, The Living Language, received a 1990 Emmy Award for Television Excellence.

Troupe edited James Baldwin: The Legacy, and was the co-author with Miles Davis of the best-selling, Miles: The Autobiography. His other books include: Watts Poets and Writers (1968); the ground-breaking Giant Talk: An Anthology of Third World Writing (Random House, 1975), which he co-edited with Rainer Schulte; and The Inside Story of TV's Roots (Warner Books, 1979), with co-author David L. Wolper, producer of that historic television mini-series.

Troupe has published five other volumes of poetry: Embryo (1971), Skulls Along the River (1984), Weather Reports (1991; reissued in 1997), Avalance (1997), and Choruses (1999). In 1995 New Alliance Records released Root Doctor, a CD featuring Troupe reading his poems accompanied by the jazz and blues guitarist, Phil Upchurch.

Quincy Troupe has completed a screenplay based on his memoir, Miles & Me (2000), which is soon to become a motion picture. His second children's book, Little Stevie, based on the life of musician Steve Wonder, was published by Houghton-Mifflin in 2004. He is currently working on a memoir, The Accordian Years; a novel, The Legacy of Charlie Footman; and a collection of essays and articles. Troupe lives with his wife, Margaret, in New York City.

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