James Tate
- Original name:
- James Vincent Appleby
- Born:
- December 8, 1943, Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
- Died:
- July 8, 2015, Springfield, Massachusetts (aged 71)
- Also Known As:
- James Vincent Appleby
- Awards And Honors:
- Pulitzer Prize
- National Book Award
James Tate (born December 8, 1943, Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.—died July 8, 2015, Springfield, Massachusetts) was an American poet noted for the surreal imagery, subversive humour, and unsettling profundity of his writing.
Tate earned a B.A. (1965) at Kansas State College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) and an M.F.A. (1967) from the University of Iowa, where he studied in the Writers’ Workshop. In 1967 his collection of poems entitled The Lost Pilot was selected for publication in the Yale Series of Younger Poets. The title poem addressed the death of his father, a bomber pilot who was shot down over Germany in 1944, when Tate was an infant; Tate later took the surname of a stepfather. After brief teaching stints in Iowa, California, and New York, Tate joined the faculty of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst in 1971. From 1967 to 1976 he served as poetry editor for The Dickinson Review, a literary journal.
Tate’s poetry combines lyrical rhythms, surreal imagery, and ironic detachment to confront the sources of modern despair and what he called “the agony of communication.” Over almost five decades he published more than two dozen books of verse, including The Oblivion Ha-Ha (1970), Absences (1972), Riven Doggeries (1979), Constant Defender (1983), and Reckoner (1986). His Selected Poems (1991), which includes poetry from nine of his previous volumes, won the Pulitzer Prize, and Worshipful Company of Fletchers (1994) received the National Book Award. In 1995 he won the Academy of American Poets’ Wallace Stevens Award. Tate’s later collections include Memoir of the Hawk (2001), Return to the City of White Donkeys (2004), and Dome of the Hidden Pavilion (2015).
Tate also wrote the eclectic prose collection The Route As Briefed (1999) and a short-story collection, Dreams of a Robot Dancing Bee (2002).