Kristin Prevallet


Kristin Prevallet is an American poet, essayist, and teacher. Her poetic work incorporates conceptual writing and trance, and her performances are rooted in feminist performance art and spoken word. Everywhere Here and in Brooklyn, I, Afterlife: Essay in Mourning Time, and Trance Poetics are among her poetic books.

Early Years

Prevallet grew up in Denver, CO. Her parents were both public school teachers. Before dying of cancer at the age of 46, her mother fulfilled her vows to become a Sister of Loretto. Prevallet studied poetics with Robert Creeley and media studies with Tony Conrad at the University at Buffalo.
Since the early 1990s, she has been teaching writing and literature courses for a variety of universities and art institutions including Bard College's Writing and Thinking Workshop, Pratt Institute, Naropa University, Poet’s House, and The Poetry Project. From 2003-2006, she worked with Anne Waldman and Bob Holman to start a school for poets at the Bowery Poetry Club, the venue which defined the New York downtown poetry scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Writing

At the University of Buffalo, Prevallet catalogued the archive of Helen Adam and her scholarly archive is a part of The Poetry Collection. She edited the definitive volume of Helen Adam’s work, which contextualizes Helen Adam within Robert Duncan's circle in The San Francisco Renaissance, as well as Adam's influence on Allen Ginsberg and the Beat Generation.
Prevallet's poem “Lyric Infiltration” from her second book Scratch Sides: Poetry, Documentation and Image-Text Projects is analyzed by Redell Olson in “Reading and Writing Through Found Materials: From Modernism to Contemporary Practice.” Olson writes, “The use of the term ‘cut-up’ places Prevallet’s procedural work in relation to the strategies of previous writers such as Tristan Tzara, Brion Gysin, and the Oulipo founder Raymond Queneau, and can also be related to the chance-based operational writing of John Cage and Jackson Mac Low. The work of Prevallet is unusual in that it does not dispense with either the term ‘lyric’ or the process of lyric writing but uses it as a basis for her procedural work.”
Elizabeth Jane Burnett describes her 2004 performance of “Cruelty and Conquest” at Naropa University as “playing with audience response as a feminist poetry that explores the ways in which the body is transacted.”
Her work has been published in numerous anthologies including The Body In Language, I’ll Drown My Book: Conceptual Writing By Women, Women Poets on Mentorship: Efforts & Affections , and Telling it Slant: Avant-garde Poetics of the 1990s.
Poems include:
"Tale of Caw"
“Quadrants”
A Glassful of Tea and Sugar in the Mouth
“I Live in a Borrowed and Often Tender Multiplicity”
“What She Said”

Work

Books

A Burning is Not A Letting Go
Fence
Jacket #27 ; previously published in
Jacket #16
Jacket #16
Riding the Meridian v2 n2
Jacket #12
Jacket #7
Slought Foundation