Christopher Robert Agee is an American poet, essayist, editor and publisher living in Ireland. He is the Founder and Editor of Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing and of The Irish Pages Press/Cló An Mhíl Bhuí as well as the author of four books of poems, and one work of poetic non-fiction.[1] He lives in Belfast, and divides his time between Ireland,[2] Scotland and Croatia.

Chris Agee
Occupation

Biography

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Early life

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Chris Agee was born in San Francisco on a US Navy hospital ship[3] and grew up in North Cambridge, Massachusetts, Bronxville, New York[3] and Block Island, Rhode Island.[4] His father was Robert Cecil Agee, a lawyer; and his mother Anne Marie Agee (née Stanford) was a legal secretary.

Agee has a younger sister, Elizabeth Macon Agee, who lives in Brooklyn with her two sons. His paternal uncle is William Cameron Agee, a noted art historian[5] of early twentieth-century American modernism; and his maternal uncle was Thomas Elmer Stanford,[6] one of the most important ethno-musicologists of twentieth-century Mexico, where he lived and worked for over 60 years.

 

After high school at Phillips Academy Andover and a year in Aix-en-Provence, France (Institute pour des Étudiants Étrangers, Université D’Aix-en-Provence), he attended Harvard University (BA, cum laude, English and American Literature and Language) and since graduation has lived in Ireland.

At Harvard, he did both a versification course and his undergraduate degree thesis (on W.H. Auden) with the poet and classical translator Robert Fitzgerald, who had a considerable literary influence on him. He was also highly influenced by a course taught by the Brazilian philosopher and social theorist Roberto Mangabeira Unger, which included many related conversations.

During his year in France, his friends included Montague Don (now a BBC presenter) and Ernst Brunner (now a Swedish poet and novelist); and at Harvard, Mira Nair (now a film-maker) and Julie Agoos (now a poet).

Life and work in Northern Ireland

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Agee wrote his first poems in his last year at Harvard, but none of his work was published until the late 1980s in Irish periodicals.[7]

Following In the New Hampshire Woods (1992) and First Light (2003), his third collection of poems, Next to Nothing (2008), was shortlisted in Britain for the 2009 Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry (funded by the British Poet Laureate), and its sequel, Blue Sandbar Moon, appeared in 2018, followed by a new work of “poetic non-fiction”, Trump Rant (2021).

He founded Irish Pages in 2002, and (formally) The Irish Pages Press in 2018. His co-editors are currently the poet and essayist Kathleen Jamie (Scotland's “Makar”, the national poet laureate), who is Scottish Editor; and the poet and scholar Meg Bateman, who is Scottish Gaelic Editor.

In 2007, he gave up his professional career in adult education to devote himself full-time to editing Irish Pages. Previously in Belfast, he had worked as a Lecturer in Adult Literacy[8] in a further education college (now Belfast Metropolitan); as a Tutor at The Open University (both full-time and part-time, including tutorials in HMP Maze and HMP Maghaberry);[9][10] and as a Senior Lecturer employed by the University of Glamorgan to direct the Northern Irish branch of a British trade-union education programme.[7]

Further literary career

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Agee edited five books and several special issues of literary magazines before his  editorial work on all titles published by The Irish Pages Press.

Agee's own work is included in 12 anthologies, mainly of Irish and American poetry.

His poems, reviews and articles have appeared regularly in The Irish Times since the early 1990s.[11]

Two of his Balkan essays, “The Stepinac File” (2000)[12] and “A Week in Sarajevo” (1996),[13] are widely known outside Ireland. The first, which explores the collaboration of the Catholic Church with the fascist Ustaše regime in Croatia during the Second World War, has circulated extensively on the Internet. The second, written at the end of the Bosnian war, achieved considerable civic renown when it appeared in translation in Sarajevo some months later.[14] His essay on the Kosova War, “A Day with the VJ” (2001), also concerns the Balkans.

Several of his Irish essays – “Weather Report: Good Friday Week, 1998”, “Poteen in a Brandy-cask: The Ethical Imagination of Hubert Butler” (1998), “Heaney's Blackbird” (2007), “The New North” (2008), “The Ethnic Basis of Irish Poetry” (2010), “Troubled Belfast” (2017), “Parable of a Summer” (2018), “The Vote Was Cant” (2019) and “Sundial & Hourglass” (2021), mostly published in Irish Pages, The Yale Review or The Irish Times – are also well known in Ireland and Britain.

In 2001, Agee participated in the “Struga Poetry Evenings”[15] in North Macedonia, Southeastern Europe’s most distinguished poetry festival, which that year awarded its “Golden Wreath” to Seamus Heaney.[16]

In 2003, Agee was an International Writing Fellow at the William Joiner Center, University of Massachusetts, Boston.[17] In 2007 and 2009, respectively, he was a writer-in-residence at the St James Cavalier Arts Centre in Malta,[14] and at the Heinrich Böll Cottage, on Achill Island, Co Mayo. Between 2012 and 2015 he was the Keith Wright Literary Fellow (Writer-in-residence) at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland. He has done readings at many festivals and venues in Ireland, Scotland, England, Croatia, Bosnia and the United States.

Balkan connections

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Agee has longstanding and close connections to the Balkans, in particular Croatia and Bosnia. He spends part of each year at his house in Žrnovo, Croatia, and has visited Bosnia many times for substantial periods.

In 1996, towards the end of the four-year siege of Sarajevo, he visited the devastated city to participate in the 12th Sarajevo Winter Festival.[18] The festival invitation was due to his writings on the Bosnian war.

During his week there, he met many leading Bosnian writers and artists, and witnessed the liberation of the city as the ultra-nationalist Serbian forces withdrew from the surrounding hills from which they besieged the city for nearly four years.[18] Later in 1996, “A Week in Sarajevo” was published in Ireland and soon translated in Sarajevo.

Agee edited Scar on the Stone (Bloodaxe Books, 1998, Poetry Society Recommended Translation), the first English-language anthology of Bosnian literature published after the outbreak of the Bosnian war and the subsequent genocide and partition. It was compiled with the assistance of the Bosnian poets Vojka Djkić and Marko Vesović.[18][19]

Scar on the Stone was funded by The Soros Foundation and brings together 19 of Bosnia's most distinguished poets, both pre-war and wartime, from the country's three main ethnic groups, as well as several prose extracts illuminating the break-up of Yugoslavia. The translators include Ted Hughes, Kathleen Jamie, Francis Jones, Ruth Padel, Charles Simic, Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Harry Clifton, among others. Of this volume, the American journalist Lulu Schwartz wrote: “One of the most important volumes in English brought into print as a result of the worldwide attention paid to the Bosnian war."[18]

In 1999, Agee's family purchased the house in Žrnovo, a small village on the island of Korčula, part of the Dalmatian archipelago just north of Dubrovnik, in the far south of Croatia.

His second collection, First Light (2003),[20] includes a suite of Balkan poems written in the mid- to late 1990s, and thus constitutes one of the very rare first-hand responses, from an English-language or Western poet, to the immediate post-war aftermath in Bosnia and Kosova.[19]

In 2015, he edited Balkan Essays/Balkansi eseji, the sixth volume of Hubert Butler’s essays, which was published simultaneously by The Irish Pages Press[21] and Fraktura (Croatia's leading literary publisher) in Croatian translation.

In 2019, Fraktura published a bilingual edition of Next to Nothing/Gotovo ništa, translated by Irena Žlof, in tandem with the Croatian translation of Birthday Letters by Ted Hughes.

In 2022, Fraktura chose The Irish Pages Press to distribute in Ireland and Britain three major, celebrated books of fiction translated from the Croatian, as part of a EU Creative Europe project entitled “Facing Insecurities in Contemporary Europe”.[22][23]

Personal life

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Agee has a son, Jacob Eoin Agee, a noted translator from Croatian to English, whose translation, Invisible Woman and Other Essays by Slavenka Drakulić, was published by Fraktura in 2022.

His daughter, Miriam Aoife Agee, died suddenly aged four in 2001. Agee's two related volumes of poetry, Next to Nothing (2008) and Blue Sandbar Moon (2018), record the aftermath of this catastrophe.

Critical responses

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On Next to Nothing:

From the dust-jacket:

Next to Nothing records the years following the death of beloved child in 2001. Though bereft of belief in the poetic outcome compared to the apocalypse of the loss itself (one sense of the title), the fidelity of these poems to the ‘heartscapes’ of grief constitutes, nonetheless, a work of genuine honouring – spare, delicate, and deeply moving.”[24]

In his review of Next to Nothing in The London Magazine (March–April 2009), the English poet Hugh Dunkerley writes:

“It is a profound and exceptionally moving book. I haven't read anything so powerful for a long time. I was left with a sense of both the fragility and the huge importance of the here and now, as well as with an expanded sense of poetry's capacity.”[24]

On Blue Sandbar Moon:

On the dust-jacket, the Irish poet Ciarán O’Rourke writes:

“A decade after Next to Nothing, Chris Agee's critically acclaimed and achingly powerful collection of poems in memory of his daughter Miriam, Blue Sandbar Moon: a micro-epic  explores with delicate precision the emotional and spiritual landscape of a life sustained in 'the aftermath of the aftermath'. Consisting of 174 untitled, interconnected micropoems, the collection evolves with technical grace and meditative clarity to present a holistic and searching vision of worlds in motion – both public and private, natural and imagined, the seen and sensed.

With a characteristically lucent understanding of the inner architectures of memory, grief, hope and art itself, Agee creates a mosaic of days and hours – a ‘micro-epic’ that is at once fluently accessible and formally path-breaking. Blending the pulse of poetry with the flex and heft of prose, the result is a genre-defying work of deep feeling and distinct literary importance.”

Of this volume, the Irish novelist David Park has also written on the dust jacket: “I think it is a monumental work ranging across both the European landscape and the deepest inner worlds.”[25]

In his review in the Dublin Review of Books, “Parables of Intimacy”, the Irish poet and critic Benjamin Keatinge describes the unusual range of “this most transnational of poets” and concludes: “Blue Sandbar Moon is Homeric in its recognition that, from a ‘local row’, as Kavanagh's ‘Epic’ reminds us, the tides of history can be unleashed. But it is Beckettian in its struggle to give voice to loss and grief.”[26]

In a 2020 article in The Irish Times (2 April 2021), Agee himself discusses both books in tandem, as a single ensemble, in “Sundial and Hourglass”.

Bibliography

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Poetry

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Non-fiction

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Selected essays

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As editor

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Books

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  • Balkan Essays, by Hubert Butler (The Irish Pages Press, 2016)
  • The Other Tongues: An Introduction to Writing in Irish, Scots Gaelic and Scots in Ulster and Scotland (The Irish Pages Press, 2013, 2016)
  • The New North: Contemporary Poetry from Northern Ireland (Wake Forest University Press, 2008 and Salt Publishing, 2011)
  • Unfinished Ireland: Essays on Hubert Butler (Irish Pages, 2003)
  • Scar on the Stone: Contemporary Poetry from Bosnia (Bloodaxe Books, 1998, Poetry Book Society Recommended Translation)

Magazine

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Work in anthologies

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References

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  1. ^ "About the Editors". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 1 July 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b Slattery, Will. "Chris Agee: Troubled Belfast". Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Trump Rant by Chris Agee". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 19 January 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  4. ^ "First Light". Chris Agee. 12 May 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Exhibition Talk: William Agee". Judd Foundation. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  6. ^ Reynoso, Cecilia (28 January 2022). "Thomas Stanford and His Field Recordings of Mexican Music". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.944. ISBN 978-0-19-936643-9. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  7. ^ a b "Interview with Chris Agee on The Poetry Programme". Archived from the original on 31 August 2010.
  8. ^ Gleason, Paul (September–October 2008). ""Anti-Dominant" Journal". Harvard Magazine. Harvard College Fund.
  9. ^ "Chris Agee". Dedalus Press. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  10. ^ "Chris Agee & Sinead Morrissey Poetry Reading". The Library of Congress. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  11. ^ "Chris Agee", The Irish Times
  12. ^ "The Stepinac File", Archipelago
  13. ^ ["A Week in Sarajevo", Habitus]
  14. ^ a b "RTE.ie Radio1: The Poetry Programme". RTÉ.ie. 31 August 2010. Archived from the original on 31 August 2010. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  15. ^ "Chris Agee and Sinead Morrissey Poetry Reading". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  16. ^ Struga Poetry Evenings#Golden Wreath Laureates
  17. ^ "Dedalus Press - Chris Agee". Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  18. ^ a b c d "Scar on the Stone: Contemporary Poetry from Bosnia". Chris Agee. 12 May 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  19. ^ a b "The Hundred Years' War | Bloodaxe Books". www.bloodaxebooks.com. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  20. ^ "First Light". Chris Agee. 12 May 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  21. ^ "The Irish Pages Press Cló An Mhíl Bhuí". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 23 October 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  22. ^ "Projekt Suočavanje s nesigurnostima suvremene Europe - Akcije - Bestseler - Knjige". fraktura.hr. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  23. ^ "Invisible Woman and Other Stories". fraktura.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  24. ^ a b Salt. "Next to Nothing". Salt. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  25. ^ "Blue Sandbar Moon by Chris Agee". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 28 November 2018. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  26. ^ "Parables of Intimacy". DRB. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
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