Marian Miner Cook
Athenaeum

A distinctive
feature of social and
cultural life at CMC

 

Writing Heavyweight History: America and the First Black Champion

Mon, February 10, 2025
Dinner Program
Adrian Matejka

How do we catalogue history when competing accounts tell radically different stories? 116 years ago, Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight champion in the world. In the century since, newspapers, films, and songs have presented him as a superhero and villain according to their agenda. This reading will explore Jack Johnson’s complex legacy across two poetic and visual narrative projects. 

A graduate of Indiana University Bloomington and the MFA program at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, award-winning poet Adrian Matejka was born in Germany as part of a military family and grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana.

He is the author of The Devil’s Garden (Alice James Books, 2003) which won the New York / New England Award and Mixology (Penguin, 2009), a winner of the 2008 National Poetry Series. His third collection, The Big Smoke (Penguin, 2013), was awarded the 2014 Anisfield-Wolf Book Award. The Big Smoke was also a finalist for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, the National Book Award, and the Pulitzer Prize in poetry. His subsequent collection, Map to the Stars, was published by Penguin in 2017. 

His mixed media collaboration with Nicholas Galanin and Kevin Neireiter inspired by Funkadelic, Standing on the Verge & Maggot Brain (Third Man Books), was published in 2021. His most recent collection of poems, Somebody Else Sold the World (Penguin, 2021), was a finalist for the UNT 2022 Rilke Prize and the 2022 Indiana Authors Award. 

His first graphic novel Last on His Feet: Jack Johnson and the Battle of the Century was published in February 2023 by Liveright. 

Among Matejka’s other honors are the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award, the Julia Peterkin Award, and fellowships from the Academy of American Poets, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, and a Simon Fellowship from United States Artists. He served as Poet Laureate of the state of Indiana in 2018-19. He currently lives in Chicago and is Editor of Poetry magazine.

Mr. Matejka’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Center for Writing and Public Discourse at CMC.

Photo credit: Polina Osherov

Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

Claremont McKenna College
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