Jena Osman


Jena Osman is an American poet and editor, who graduated from Brown University, and the University at Buffalo, [The State University of New York|State University of New York at Buffalo], with a Ph.D. She teaches in the MFA Creative Writing program at Temple University.

Biography

Osman's work has appeared in American Letters & Commentary, Conjunctions, Hambone, Verse, and XCP: Cross-Cultural Poetics.
She has been a writing fellow at the MacDowell Colony, the Blue Mountain Center, the Djerassi Foundation, and Chateau de la Napoule. She inspired the start of Hyphen magazine.
In her ongoing project, "Court Reports," Osman worked directly from court records, judicial opinions bearing the stamp and influence of Charles Reznikoff.

Career

With Juliana Spahr, Osman founded and edited the literary magazine Chain from 1994-2005. Chain highlighted often-experimental work by communities that Osman and Spahr felt were underrepresented in other literary journals of the time. Osman credits her time working on Chain as “central to development as a poet.”
Osman’s The Network was selected as a 2009 National Poetry Series Winner.
2014’s Corporate Relations was inspired by the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United v. FEC ruling and is structured around twelve Supreme Court cases that similarly granted constitutional rights to large corporations. The book served as the inspiration for composer Ted Hearne’s choral piece, “Sound From the Bench.”
Osman’s sixth book Motion Studies, consists of three essay-poems connecting meditations on 19th-century science to commentary on the power of contemporary technology. Motion Studies was selected as a 2020 Firecracker Award winner by the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses.
In 2023, Osman released A Very Large Array: Selected Poems, a collection of work published in various out-of-print books and journals spanning 30+ years of her career.

Awards