Biographies 2007-2008

Eugene Redmond
Eugene Redmond was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He is a poet, playwright, critic, editor, educator, and important figure in the Black Arts Movement. He is a graduate of Southern Illinois University and Washington University, St. Louis. In 1968 he published his first volume of poetry, A Tale of Two Toms, or Tom-Tom. Subsequent volumes include A Tale of Time & Toilet Tissue (1969), Sentry of the Four Golden Pillars (1970), River of Bones and Flesh and Blood (1971), Songs from an Afro/Phone (1972), Consider Loneliness as These Things (1973), In a Time of Rain & Desire (1973), and The Eye in the Ceiling (1992). Three of these collections were published by the Black Writers Press, which Redmond founded with Henry Dumas and Sherman Fowler. He is also author of Drumvoices: The Mission of Afro-American Poetry, a Critical History (1976), an influential survey of poetry from 1746 to 1976. His awards include a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship, a Lifetime Achievement Award from Pan-African Movement USA, a Pushcart Prize, an American Book Award, and Writing Fellowships from the California, Illinois, Louisiana, Missouri and West Virginia Arts Councils. He has been poet in residence at Oberlin College, California State University, University of Wisconsin, and Wayne State University. Since 1990 Redmond has taught at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville where he is currently an emeritus professor of English and editor of Drumvoices Revue. He lives in East St. Louis, MO.