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About Us

The Centre for Poetry and Poetics promotes the reading, writing and editing of poetry from classical antiquity to the present, as well as the critical exploration of current issues and ideas in literary theory.

We are based in the Department of English Studies, with our directors and members drawn from departments across the University.
Our People
Books and scroll

History of the Centre for Poetry and Poetics

The Centre for Poetry and Poetics was established in 2012 under the Directorship of Professor Stephen Regan. The Centre emerged from the archive of the important North East modernist poet, Basil Bunting. The Basil Bunting Poetry Archive was established in 1988 by Richard Cadell and Diana Collecott, and is still held in Durham University Library's Special Collections at Palace Green; the Centre continues to foster research in this area.

One of Basil Bunting's guiding principles was that poetry should be read aloud. The Centre has held numerous public events in Durham to promote the performance of poetry. Regular themes include:

  • The Poems That Made Me, where the Centre invites an established poet to read from the authors who inspired him or her
  • Poetry Aloud, where members celebrate the works of important poets such as T.S. Eliot and W.B. Yeats
  • Evenings with Durham Book Festival's annual poet laureate, who is invited by the Centre
  • Our Research

    Discover more about current research projects and events organised within the Centre for Poetry and Poetics.
    A person putting a book back on a bookshelf
  • Our Partners

    The Centre for Poetry and Poetics has connections to a variety of university-wide and external research centres and organisations.
    A person sitting by a window reading a book

Our Research

Discover more about current research projects and events organised within the Centre for Poetry and Poetics.
A person putting a book back on a bookshelf

Our Partners

The Centre for Poetry and Poetics has connections to a variety of university-wide and external research centres and organisations.
A person sitting by a window reading a book
To appreciate present conditions, collate them with those of antiquity.

Basil Bunting
'Chomei at Toyama'