Louisville Magazine – UofL News Thu, 16 Apr 2026 19:59:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL poet honored by ACC invitation, fellowships /section/arts-and-humanities/uofl-poet-honored-by-acc-invitation-fellowships/ Fri, 29 Mar 2019 19:13:32 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=46280 April is National Poetry Month and poet Kiki Petrosino will begin it in the nation’s capital, invited to explain current issues in her craft during the ACCelerate Festival.

The UofL English associate professor and creative writing program director is one of eight scholars chosen from ACC universities to participate in the festival’s “Bridging Chasms” conversations. Two accomplished professors from different studies – say, an author and a scientist – are paired for each exchange to explain essential elements and details from their fields in the hope of increasing understanding across disciplines.

The ACC Smithsonian Creativity and Innovation Festival also will include interactive installations from the conference’s 15 schools, including “The Sweet Way to Preserve Blood” and “Whiskey Webs” featuring UofL researchers. UofL theatre arts also will perform “The Mountaintop,” a fictional retelling of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s last night. The events are April 5-7 at the National Museum of American History.

For her part, Petrosino expects to discuss the rise in intensely personal viewpoints in contemporary poetry, with writers celebrating identity issues of race, class, gender and sexuality and incorporating their own history in their work. With that shift comes a “movement against the patriarchal gaze of traditional poetry,” she said. “What do you do with all the old stuff?”

Instead of pushing aside all the canonical works as problematic or no longer useful, she suggests that scholars need to “open up the work” and examine those standards and lesser-known pieces in different ways.

Petrosino, teaching in her ninth year at UofL and finishing up her fourth poetry volume, is venturing into the personal realm herself through the help of new national and statewide awards in her field. The National Endowment for the Arts awarded her a $25,000 creative writing fellowship this year, one of 35 in poetry. She is concluding her Al Smith Fellowship from the Kentucky Arts Council, one of its 16 $7,500 awards last year.

“It was really wonderful to be recognized as a Kentucky author through that grant,” she said.

She plans to use the resources to work on “White Blood,” due for 2020 publication by local literary press Sarabande Books, and a fifth, related volume.

“These two projects look at the legacies of slavery and discrimination in the Upper South,” particularly in Virginia and Kentucky. Petrosino is conducting genealogical research into her own family’s Virginia history “to see what their lives were like before and after the Civil War.”

In reclaiming this heritage, Petrosino has been trying to piece together family oral history and records for enslaved and newly freed people, plus get a sense of her relatives’ environment.

“There’s something about standing in the physical spot where certain ancestors lived,” she said. “That’s important for a poet too.”

The poem “Europe,” her favorite from her third volume, “Witch Wife,” recently attracted national and local attention. U.S. poet laureate Tracy K. Smith read and discussed it during her Feb. 18 poem-each-weekday podcast “The Slowdown,” produced in partnership with the Library of Congress and the Poetry Foundation. UofL President Neeli Bendapudi read from it during her March 5 Louisville public lecture about the liberal arts in a global economy.

Petrosino strongly believes in the liberal arts too and not just because she is a poet.

“No job I’ve ever had has been completely what it says on the job description,” she said. “If you are a person who can write well and communicate and solve problems and work with others….Even in the hard sciences, the narrative is very important.”

The state has a long history of celebrating the arts – from music to the storytelling tradition, from gastronomy to visual arts, she said. Various arts communities are collaborating and reaching out, as happened last year when Petrosino was invited to contribute a live spoken-word performance as part of the Louisville Ballet’s annual choreographers’ showcase. Louisville magazine recently asked her to write a poem reflecting on the fatal shootings at a Louisville grocery store.

“The creative economy of Kentucky and particularly Louisville has always been strong,” she said. “For there to be a creative writing program at the University of Louisville is just as it should be.”

Next year will be the 20th for the English department’s creative writing program to offer the Anne and William Axton Reading Series, which brings distinguished authors to Belknap Campus not only to share their work but also to lead free, public master classes to describe their creative process and to critique student work.

“The point of the Axton endowment is to bring students into interaction with the writers,” Petrosino said. “To have as much interaction is a unique thing.”

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UofL’s Brown Cancer Center named ‘Charity of Choice’ for Best of Louisville event /post/uofltoday/uofls-brown-cancer-center-named-charity-of-choice-for-best-of-louisville-event/ /post/uofltoday/uofls-brown-cancer-center-named-charity-of-choice-for-best-of-louisville-event/#respond Tue, 15 May 2018 18:40:43 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=42031 Tickets are now available for Best of Louisville award celebration recognizing people and companies who make Louisville a great city.

The James Graham Brown Cancer Center at the University of Louisville has been named the “Charity of Choice” of the event, scheduled for 6:30-10 p.m., Thursday, July 12, at the C2 Event Venue, 225 E. Breckinridge St.

Funds raised for the cancer center from the Best of Louisville event will specifically go to the UofL Brown Cancer Center’s , a place for patients and families to receive much-needed resources such as transportation and lodging assistance, wigs, scarves and prosthetics, and a variety of therapies, education and support.

Early bird tickets throughout May are $35 per person when using the code ENDCANCER at checkout. Beginning June 1, early bird tickets will be $45 with the code. Regular-price tickets purchased without the code are $50 per person.

Tickets are available at by clicking on the link. All sales with the promo code ENDCANCER go directly to the cancer center.

Admission includes food and drink tastings, cash bar and a complimentary copy of Louisville Magazine’s July “Best of Louisville” issue.

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Country First, Cards Forever /post/magazine/country-first-cards-forever/ /post/magazine/country-first-cards-forever/#respond Wed, 30 Nov 2016 18:08:28 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=34211 UofL is leading the way in providing access to education to our entire community, from teaching soldiers at Fort Knox leadership skills to bringing Louisville’s literature lovers one step closer to Shakespeare’s original works. Read about the university’s latest efforts in the fall 2016 UofL magazine. Feature stories include:

: See the far-reaching impact of the premier programs and services UofL has created for U.S. military members and veterans.

: UofL collaborates with community arts and cultural partners to put on a city-wide celebration of all things Shakespeare.

: UofL’s Dan Popa and his research team are pioneering robotics technologies that could provide needed assistance for healthcare facilities.

: James Wheeler, 73DMD, has brought the same passion he uses in dentistry to a small museum in his basement dedicated to his father and World War II.

The full issue of UofL Magazine, including alumni and campus news, is also available .  

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