Jericho Brown recalled his days of leaving his downtown New Orleans office to navigate the I-10 East traffic toward the University of New Orleans. Brown spent much of his time navigating the political landscape as a speechwriter for then-Mayor Marc Morial before heading to 色色研究所鈥檚 Creative Writing Workshop.
鈥淏y the time I got there and sat down, it would be 5:59,鈥 Brown said with a laugh. 鈥淚 would be just in time for my 6 o鈥檆lock class and so I was always glad that they offered those classes!鈥
The evening classes allowed Brown to learn more about poetry and keep his job, he said. It was at 色色研究所 that he found a love and appreciation for poetic form under the direction of poetry professors Kay Murphy and John Gery, Brown said.
One of the features included in his Pulitzer Prize winning book, 鈥淭he Tradition,鈥 is a form he invented called the duplex, he said.
鈥淲hen I was inventing that form, I was doing it having taken those classes with Kay Murphy with learning how form can work in poems,鈥 said Brown, who earned an MFA in creative writing from 色色研究所 in 2002. 鈥淪o what I鈥檓 doing now still bears upon what I learned at 色色研究所.鈥
The courses at 色色研究所 also sparked another interest in Brown: teaching.
鈥淭aking the classes at 色色研究所 is what really got me thinking more seriously about pedagogy and thinking about how I would run a class,鈥 Brown said.
鈥淛ohn (Gery) had workshops with poems where he had us looking at our own work. But, he always had us doing that in the context of the history of poetry in the United States. So, it鈥檚 not just that we were looking at our poems, we were also looking at poems that were possible influences for revisions.鈥
Brown, who holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Dillard University in New Orleans, later earned a doctorate in literature and creative writing from the University of Houston. He lives in Atlanta and is an associate professor and the director of the Creative Writing Program at Emory University.
Now, Brown has earned a writer鈥檚 pinnacle of recognition鈥攁 Pulitzer Prize. Brown received the prestigious honor in May for "The Tradition," his most recent poetry collection that was published in 2019 by Copper Canyon Press.
鈥淚 cried. I think I screamed,鈥 Brown said laughing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 funny, the screams were intermittent. Like I would scream; then I would make a sandwich and I would scream again. Every once in a while just yelps. Intermittent hollers!鈥
The 2020 Pulitzer in Poetry is awarded for a distinguished volume of original verse by an American author and carries a $15,000 prize.
The Pulitzer Prize Board described Brown鈥檚 work as a 鈥渃ollection of masterful lyrics that combine delicacy with historical urgency in their loving evocation of bodies vulnerable to hostility and violence.鈥
Brown has authored three books. His first book, 鈥淧lease鈥 (New Issues 2008), won the American Book Award. Brown's second book, 鈥淭he New Testament鈥 (Copper Canyon 2014), won the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award. His third collection, 鈥淭he Tradition,鈥 was a finalist for the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award.
In his classes at Emory, Brown encourages his students to 鈥渇eel free to fail.鈥
鈥淢y classroom is one, I hope it is one, where students make all kinds of mistakes and from those mistakes, learn what they want things to actually look like,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to get them to tell the truth. All good writing has to tell the truth.鈥
The Tradition
Brown takes the title of his book from a poem in the collection with the same name, 鈥淭he Tradition.鈥
Published in 2019 and heralded with the Pulitzer Prize on May 4, prior to the world knowing the name 鈥淕eorge Floyd,鈥 the poem is both eerily prescient and sadly historical in its content.
Like much of the book, the poem 鈥淭he Tradition,鈥 is a pastoral poem on its surface. It is about the environment, about the concerns about the natural world, Brown said.
鈥淲hile that鈥檚 at the base of the book, the book doesn鈥檛 ignore social justices, social issues that are also going on in that world,鈥 Brown said.
The poem is at first about Black men tending to a garden of flowers. In the end, the last line is: John Crawford. Eric Garner. Mike Brown.
鈥淚n that moment, we find that this isn鈥檛 just a world of flowers,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also a world where unarmed Black people get murdered by police for doing absolutely nothing wrong.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 part of why I called the whole book 鈥楾he Tradition.鈥 That poem is a sonnet. We always think of the sonnet as probably the most traditional of forms.鈥
The title also alludes to the 鈥渘ormalization鈥 of injustice, Brown said. It underlines how we live through cultural and societal assaults as if they are normal.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a book about the fact that when someone defiles someone else鈥檚 body we say in common parlance, 鈥楽he got raped.鈥 And in that sentence nobody did the raping; somebody went out and got 鈥榓 rape,鈥 as if you can buy one at Kroger,鈥 Brown said.
鈥淧art of what the book is about is how, even at the level of sentences as simple as that, we buy into a kind of normalization of evil. I didn鈥檛 want to buy into that anymore.鈥
The book also is about love and joy, Brown said. He hopes readers come away with both perspectives.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just that I鈥檓 looking at this dark underside of life, I鈥檓 also looking at how we survive in spite of the dark underside,鈥 Brown said.
鈥楢 derivative of a derivative鈥
When he was 28 and publishing poems professionally, Brown decided to change his name from Nelson Demery III.
鈥淚 was the third and when I started having poems published it would say Nelson Demery III and it drove me crazy,鈥 said Brown, who grew up in Shreveport, La. 鈥淚 wanted my poems to have a name on them that was only mine. I didn鈥檛 want to share it with my dad or granddad. I wanted to reinvent myself.鈥
Brown laughs now at what he described as his 鈥渞omantic鈥 reasoning for the name change.
鈥淓verybody in my family, everybody in my church and growing up always called me Trey, which literally means three, you know what I mean? I was the third one of myself,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚 was like a derivative of a derivative for heaven鈥檚 sakes! At least that鈥檚 how I saw it.
鈥淚f I had become a poet later, maybe I would have been old enough to not think so romantically about it.鈥
Despite his professional name change, Brown is proud of his family name and the strong bonds it represents. He credits his parents鈥 hardline stance on education excellence for his success.
鈥淚 have a sense of discipline and a sense of belief in getting my work done,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚 get that from my daddy and mama.鈥
The Pulitzer and Gwendolyn Brooks
Brown watched the Pulitzer ceremony as it streamed live, waiting to see if his name would be called. Atlanta residents, like many others in May, were under a stay-home order because of COVID-19.
鈥淚 was by myself in my room, sitting on my bed trying to make sure my computer worked; making sure I hadn鈥檛 missed it,鈥 Brown said with a laugh. 鈥淲hen that lady said my name, woo! I was happy!鈥
Brown could not keep pace with the text, calls and social media congratulatory shout outs, so he just took time to bask in the accomplishment.
鈥淚 think I鈥檝e talked to 鈥 or maybe texted or emailed 鈥 everyone I鈥檝e ever known,鈥 said Brown.
At one point, his phone indicated he had more than 650 texts, he said.
鈥淚 gave up because I couldn鈥檛 keep up!鈥
Asked what the Pulitzer Prize means to him鈥攂eyond the obvious universal prestige associated with its bestowal鈥擝rown got a bit emotional as he talked about the late poet Gwendolyn Brooks.
This year marks the 70th anniversary of Brooks being awarded a Pulitzer Prize in poetry for her book, 鈥淎nnie Allen,鈥 and becoming the first Black person to win a Pulitzer.
鈥淪o what it means for me is that I鈥檓 becoming a part of the Gwendolyn Brooks tradition of poetry writing, which is to say that I鈥檓 trying to make well-crafted and subversive work,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淏rooks has always been an idol for me; so having my name on any list near her name is very exciting for me and it makes me emotional.鈥