Timothy Corsellis Poetry Prize

Poetry PrizeDeadline: Thursday, September 14, 2017
Entry Fee: None
Eligibility: Poets worldwide aged 14-25
Prize: Publication on Poetry Society website and £100 book tokens.
Submit: A response poem to one or more of the WWII poets mentioned below. Include a brief commentary explaining how your poem responds to the poet’s life or work.
Judge: Poet Wendy Cope
Website: http://ypn.poetrysociety.org.uk/
Guidelines: http://ypn.poetrysociety.org.uk/workshop/the-timothy-corsellis-prize-2017/

Timothy Corsellis Poetry Prize 2017

Timothy Corsellis was a young poet and pilot killed in 1941. The Prize was set up in his name, with the support of his family, to encourage more people to read the powerful but lesser-known poets of the Second World War.

The Timothy Corsellis Poetry Prize asks you to respond to the life and/or work of a small selection of Second World War poets, including Keith Douglas, Sidney Keyes, Alun Lewis, John Jarmain, Henry Reed, Anna Akhmatova, Gertrud Kolmar and Timothy Corsellis.

The site is also running a Young Critics Prize for short essays of 500-1,500 words exploring which three poets are most likely to be read in twenty years’ time, and why. If you’re looking for inspiration, why not read last year’s winning essay, ‘I wandered lonely as a war-poet: Locating the individual in the unimaginable’ by Henry Wong.

The judges for both Prizes will be celebrated poet Wendy Cope; Professor Fran Brearton (for the War Poets Association), a leading authority on war poetry and Director of the Seamus Heaney Centre in Belfast; Llewela Selfridge on behalf of the Imperial War Museum in London; and Judith Palmer, Director of The Poetry Society.

How to enter the Timothy Corsellis Poetry Prize

1. Read this brief article placing Second World War Poetry in the context of the history of war poetry.
2. Read more about the eight WWII poets featured in the Prize, and explore some of their poems.
3. Choose one or more poet/s and write a poem in response to their life and/or poetry. It can be anything about their life or work, whatever inspires you.
4. Send your poem in the body of an email to educationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk with the subject line ‘Corsellis Poetry Prize 2017’. Remember to include your name, age, the county you live in, if you’re based in the UK, or the country you live in if you’re based outside the UK.
5. Include a short commentary (up to 300 words) explaining the way in which your poem is a response to the life or work of the WWII poet/s.
6. The deadline for entries is Thursday 14 September 2017.

How to Enter the Young Critics Prize:

 

1. Read this brief article placing Second World War Poetry in the context of the history of war poetry.
2. Read more about the eight WWII poets featured in the Prize.
3. Consider which three poets you think are most likely to be read in twenty years’ time. What is it about their work that will ensure their relevance to future generations? What makes their work long-lastingly powerful? Feel free to discuss individual poems. There are no right or wrong questions or answers, and you can approach the prose piece in any way you choose.
4. Send your essay (500-1,500 words) as a Word document attachment to educationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk, with the subject line ‘Corsellis Young Critics 2017’. Remember to include your name, age, the county you live in, if you’re based in the UK, or the country you live in if you’re based outside the UK.
5. The deadline for entries is Thursday 14 September 2017.

Calling all teachers!
We warmly encourage teachers to send in their students’ entries to both the Poetry Prize and the Young Critics Prize. We have a free, downloadable lesson plan to help bring Second World War poetry into your classroom. This discusses one of Timothy Corsellis’ poems in-depth, encouraging students to closely analyse the poem in order to write their own.

If you’d like to enter a set of entries from your students – and we would love to receive these! – then simply email the poems and /or essays to educationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk, or post them to us at Timothy Corsellis Prize 2017, The Poetry Society, 22 Betterton Street, London, WC2H 9BX. Please ensure that each entry is labelled with the student’s name, age, and the name of the school.

Prizes
There will be a first prize winner and two runners-up in each category, who will receive £100 book tokens and £50 book tokens respectively, plus poetry books and posters, and publication on Young Poets Network. The first prize poem will be published in The Poetry Society’s quarterly paper Poetry News. The first prize essay will be published on The Poetry Society’s website.

General rules
• The Timothy Corsellis Poetry Prize and Young Critics Prize are open to individuals from all over the world aged 14-25.
• You can send in as many poems as you like for the Poetry Prize.
• You can send in one essay for the Young Critics Prize, between 500 and 1,500 words long. The word count includes quotations.
• You are very welcome to enter both categories if you choose.

Before entering either prize, you should also ensure you have read through and understood our general terms and conditions of entry.

Young Poets Network would like to thank the Corsellis family for their generosity in establishing this Prize and their continuing support of The Poetry Society.

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