Who We Are
Tapping the transformative power of poetry for diverse communities, we value radical collaboration, joyful creative process, and the vitality of human connections.
We serve the Fordham University community, as well as a national network of poets, scholars, and social justice workers. Every two years, we determine a new theme in dialogue with what is urgent in the national focus and create an institutional partnership to generate extraordinary programming and outreach.
Our current theme is WITNESS.
Staff
Elisabeth Frost (Director)
A poet and scholar, Elisabeth Frost is the author of a collection of poetry, All of Us (White Pine Press, 2011); two chapbooks, A Theory of the Vowel (Red Glass Books, 2013) and Rumor (Mermaid Tenement Press, 2009); and a critical study, The Feminist Avant-Garde in American Poetry (University of Iowa Press, 2003). She is also co-editor (with Cynthia Hogue) of Innovative Women Poets: An Anthology of Contemporary Poetry and Interviews (University of Iowa Press, 2006). In addition to a Fulbright Fellowship as a visiting professor at the University of Wroclaw, Poland, Frost has received grants from the Rockefeller Foundation-Bellagio Center, the University of Connecticut Humanities Institute, MacDowell, Yaddo, and the Ledig-Rowohlt Foundation, among others.
Alex Tischer
(Graduate Assistant)
Alex Tischer is a first-year Ph.D. student at Fordham University in English and a co-host on the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment's EcoCast podcast. His research interests are primarily in ecological theatre.
Abigail Falato (Fellow)
Abby Falato is a second-year MA student in English at Fordham University continuing her studies of literature and writing. Her interests include the poetry and poetics of a variety of time periods, early twentieth-century poetry and literature/ modernisms, imagism, war poetry, English literature, and practices and pedagogies of close reading. She loves writing poems, working with
ekphrasis, and is eager to learn and understand more about the different ways new and contemporary poetic voices look.
Past Fellows
Advisory Circle
Tamiko Beyer
Janlori Goldman
Cynthia Hogue
Deborah Paredez
Roger Reeves
Poetic Justice Institute initiatives are made possible through the support of
the Dean’s Office of Fordham College at Lincoln Center
and The Axe-Houghton Foundation