The 21st Show

Poet Nikky Finney on the accessibility of poetry, mentorship and more

 
Nikky Finney is professor at the University of South Carolina, but she’s in Illinois this week for a series of events at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, sponsored by the school’s Humanities Research Institute.

Nikky Finney is professor at the University of South Carolina, but she’s in Illinois this week for a series of events at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, sponsored by the school’s Humanities Research Institute. Photo courtesy Noah Adams/NPR

Poet Nikky Finney's writing reckons with what it means to be a woman and Black in America and in the South, in the past and today. Her most recent collection is called “Love Child’s Hotbed of Occasional Poetry.” Finney’s work has earned her accolades, including the National Book Award for poetry in 2011, for another collection, called “Head Off & Split.”

She joined The 21st before she gives a talk at the Alice Campbell Alumni Center in Urbana this evening.

GUEST:

Nikky Finney 

Author, Love Child’s Hotbed of Occasional Poetry and Head Off & Split | Professor of Creative Writing and Southern Letters, University of South Carolina

 

 

Prepared for web by Owen Henderson

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