Poet Sarah Howe Net Worth 2022, Biography, Age

Sarah Howe (Poet) Wiki, Biography, Age, Net Worth, Family, Twitter

Sara Howe Poet
Source/Instagram/griffinpoetry

How Much Is Poet Sarah Howe Net Worth 2022?

Sarah Howe Net Worth 2022 is approximately $1 Million-$3 Million.

Sarah Howe Biography:

Early Life

 Sarah Howe was born to an English father and a Chinese mother in Hong Kong in 1983. She moved to England at seven years old.

What is the age of Sarah Howe?

Sarah Howe age is 39 Years.

Education

She enrolled in 2001 and received her first degree in English at Christ’s College University of Cambridge. Later, she earned a Ph.D. from that college.

Her thesis is entitled “Literature & the Visual Imagination In Renaissance England, 1580-1620”. She spent a year at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, the USA, during her studies. It was there she started to write poetry seriously at age 21.

She was the recipient of the Hawthornden Fellowship, the Harper-Wood Studentship in English Poetry, and fellowships from Harvard University’s Radcliffe Institute and the Civitella Ranieri Foundation.

Career

 In 2009, Howe published the pamphlet A Certain Chinese Encyclopedia. It won the Eric Gregory Award. Loop Of Jade (Chatto & Windus) was her first poetry collection and won the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2015. In June 2018, she was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Howe is currently a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, University College, London. She also founded the literary journal Prac Crit.

Poetry

 Sarah Howe, a British Hong Kong poet, explores the relationship between Britain and other countries. She reveals the strangeness of home and the familiarity foreign places offer, particularly for migrants and refugees. Howe often experiments with language in her poetry to explore the complexity of her dual heritage.

Andrew Holgate, Sunday Times editor, awarded Howe the Young Poets of the Year 2015 for being “a writer always conscious of language.” Her debut collection, Loop of Jade, has a broad scope both linguistically and thematically.

The poems “Drawn using a very fine camelhairbrush” and “Having just broke the water pitcher” are about Chinese characters that Howe learned in real life. Some poems refer to a wide range of western poets Howe has studied and read, including Ezra Pound, John Ashbery, and Philip Sidney.

Loop of Jade

Howe cites American poetry as a significant influence on her writing, particularly when she was an exchange student at Harvard. She claims that all the poems in Loop Of Jade have “a common thread: they all shaped her personhood at different times and places.”

Howe’s poetry has a recurring theme of her limited memories and deep desire to connect with her Chinese heritage. Three narrative poems in Loop of Jade – “Crossing From Guangdong,” “Loop of Jade,” and “Islands” – are about reimagining Howe’s mother’s childhood in Hong Kong as an orphaned child.

Howe claims that poetry as a form of life-writing allows her to explore untold family stories without expectation of accuracy. Her poems’ visual spaces reflect the silences and pause she experienced in her mother’s stories.

Howe draws on her extensive knowledge of mythology and literature from different cultures to fill in the gaps in her family history. One example of this is “Tame,” a mythic narrative about a Chinese daughter that draws on the Roman myths of Apollo and Daphne.

Howe uses a mix of allusions to help her interpret the experience of her mother of gender discrimination. However, the text also hints to the reader that it is an imagined representation of westernized poets.

Howe’s poetry provides commentary on current politics in China, Hong Kong, and elsewhere. Loop from Jade’s poem “Innumerable” attempts reconciliation between Howe’s childhood memories of the Tiananmen massacre and her adult knowledge of the tragedy.

Two Systems

Howe was a Harvard University Fellow and wrote “Two Systems,” a series of erasure poems. She removed words from the Hong Kong Basic Law and transformed them into a “self destructing text” to highlight Hong Kong’s declining autonomy under China’s tightening grip.

Fellowship

From 2010 to 2015, she was a Research Fellow at Caius College and Gonville College. She then took up a Leverhulme Early-Career Fellowship at University College London. She was the recipient of the Harper-Wood Studentship in English Poetry and the Hawthornden Fellowship.

Sarah Howe also got fellowships from Harvard University’s Radcliffe Institute and the Civitella Ranieri Foundation.

Awards

  •  In 2009, Howe published the pamphlet A Certain Chinese Encyclopedia. It won the Eric Gregory Award. 
  • Loop Of Jade (Chatto & Windus) was her first poetry collection and won the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2015 and The Sunday Times/PFD Young Writer of the Year Award, and was shortlisted for the Seamus Heaney Centre Poetry Prize and the Forward Prize for Best First Collection.

Sarah Howe’s Poetry

Howe’s work has a wide range of subject matter and forms. Loop Of Jade contains poems that reflect on Chinese culture and history and responses to works by Bonnard and Puccini. Some poems engage with Pound, Ashbery, and Borges.

These diverse works reflect identity, childhood, memory, and the act itself of poetic composition. The opening of “Crossing from Guandong” demonstrates the fluidity with which Howe invokes the process of recollection.

We are always looking for the right place.

We lose many minutes each day.

We can all go to another place even if we don’t know it.

We know that we are in the middle of the enveloping sheets

A childhood bed or crossing

That bright, willow-bounded weir at sunset

Please tell me why I came.

This passage demonstrates Howe’s impressive technical skills. This passage is full of Howe’s technical skills. The subtle slant rhymes dramatize the transitions between different but related memories. The syntax is a long, loop-like structure of consonantal patterns.

The prose sections, often written metrically, describe Howe’s conversations with her mother over China’s childhood. It is Howe’s pragmatic acknowledgment that she can’t know the places of her mother’s upbringing and that they will always be beyond her imagination that makes her most memorable descriptive writing.

This place is a mystery to me. Its daily thinning soup, a scoop of rice served in a bowl with a chink edge.

Their sleeping room is filled with the sound of thundering harbors. Outside, there are the clanking, rattling sounds of boats. She curls up closer to the other girls. Hairs start to lift on slightly brown arms. A bright smack of lightning can cause hair to lift. The bunk’s frame will emit a preternatural hum, similar to a celestial tuning fork.

You can feel the ‘preternatural sound’ of this iron bed frame in other parts of her work, particularly in poems that are focused on objects. The collection’s opening poem, ‘Mother’s Jewellery Box,’ renders the quotidian subject of the group so precisely that it is almost uncanny, emitting an intense and ambiguous emotion charge.

The twin lids

The black lacquer box

open away

A moonlit lake

Ghostly lotus leaves

Unfurl in tiers

Howe’s work has a distinctive characteristic: the way she places these intimate moments in imagination and experience within broad historical and cultural contexts. “Others,” a poem about the idea of future children, starts with an epigraph in Genesis.

It then takes it through etymological investigations into English, Hebrew, Greek, and Chinese before reaching this simple question: “I wonder if they will have your blue eyes?” This is a characteristic of Sarah Howe’s work that combines a broad range of knowledge with a generous sensibility to produce poems full of intensity and immediacy.

Howe’s nuanced and expertly modulated reading of her poems enhances our appreciation of the entire body of work.

Details About Sarah Howe

Full Name Sarah Howe
NicknameSarah
GenderFemale
Year of Birth1983
Birth PlaceHong Kong
NationalityBritish
Age39 Years
ProfessionPoet
Net Worth$1 Million-$3 Million
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/luckyflowerhowe

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