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These poems come from a special recording for the Poetry Archive:

26 May 2013 7:30 PM
Sylvia Plath's Ariel at the Southbank. Sylvia Plath died 50 years ago leaving a black binder of poems that was to become her final, posthumously published collection, Ariel.
Now 40 leading female poets and performers read one poem each from the restored edition of the final unedited manuscript in an evening introduced by Plath's daughter, Frieda Hughes. Readers include: Emily Berry, Lily Bevan, Samantha Bond, Emily Bruni, Anna Chancellor, Gillian Clarke, Julia Copus, Imtiaz Dharker, Ruth Fainlight, Kate Fahy, Vicki Feaver, Siobhan Redmond, Miranda Richardson, Jo Shapcott, Jean Sprackland, Juliet Stevenson, Harriet Walter, and Susan Wooldridge, amongst others.
'In these poems… Sylvia Plath becomes herself, becomes something imaginary, newly, wildly and subtly created.' (Robert Lowell). Tickets £25/£20/£15/£10. For more information or to book visit www.southbankcentre.co.uk/whatson or call 020 7960 4200.
Royal Festival Hall, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX

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Walking in the Shadows Smith/Doorstop, 1994
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The Shuttered Eye Bloodaxe Books, 1995
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In Defence of Adultery Bloodaxe Books, 2003
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Julia Copus Reading from Her Poems The Poetry Archive, 2010
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The World's Two Smallest Humans Faber, 2012
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Julia Copus was born in London in 1969 and grew up in a house with three brothers who were learning to play musical instruments. Two of them later went on to be professional musicians, and Copus has said in interview that in order to have quiet, and a room of her own, she gave up her own trumpet lessons and moved into a caravan in the driveway while she was doing her exams. "For the first time, I truly began to feel that with a notepad and pen I could make my own world; could be whoever -and wherever - I wanted to be."
Copus studied Latin at Durham University, and in 1994, at the age of 24, she won an Eric Gregory Award. Her first full collection The Shuttered Eye, appeared from Bloodaxe a year later and was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. The Shuttered Eye subtly reworks myth and fairytale to examine the fragility of childhood, and takes the reader through the fractures and complexities of familial relationships.
In Defence of Adultery (2003) explores the theme of roads that are taken, and considers the possibilities of rewinding time and choosing different roads. The winning poem of the 2002 National Poetry Competition, Breaking The Rule, is included in this collection. Copus often uses scientific metaphors to anchor the metaphysical, and she has explained in interview her particular interest in what quantum-physicists call 'shadow selves', whereby "in every choice we make our world splinters off from another world in which we made the other choice."
This second book also examines the geometries of love, its joys and hurts, and our defencelessness in the face of it. As the title poem begins, "We don't fall in love: it rises through us/the way that certain music does." And love is also like water, as you will hear on this Archive recording: "Tumbling from some far-flung cloud….ever so gently wounding us, making us whole." RV Bailey has written that "Copus has great leaping complex visions, but she's nevertheless reliably attached to reality, to the oddness, the innocent simplicity of things, especially as they relate to humans. Her poems are structured with immense quiet subtlety."
Copus's introductions to her poems on this Archive recording are both intimate and illuminating, and her voice is melodic, enabling us to enjoy the musicality and vibrancy of language of these intricately crafted poems.
This recording was made on the 5th February 2010 at the Audio Workshop London, and was produced by Anne Rosenfeld.

1994 Eric Gregory Award
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1995 Hawthornden Fellowship
1997 (shortlist) Forward Prize for Best First Collection
The Shuttered Eye
Website
2001 Arts Council Writers' Award
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2005 Arts Council Writers' Award
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2002 BBC Alfred Bradley Bursary Award (Best New Radio Playwright)
Eenie Meenie Macka Racka
2002 BBC/Gulbenkian Writers Award
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2002 National Poetry Competition (First Prize - 'Breaking the Rule')
Website
2010 Forward Prize for Best Single Poem
An Easy Passage
2012 (shortlist) T S Eliot Prize for
The World's Two Smallest Humans
Website