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Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Deaf poet Raymond Antrobus wins Ted Hughes prize

British Jamaican’s debut collection challenges Hughes’s description of deaf children

After fiercely challenging Ted Hughes’s description of deaf children as “alert and simple” in a poem in his first collection, the deaf spoken-word poet Raymond Antrobus has won the Ted Hughes award for poetry.

The 33-year-old British Jamaican, who has performed at Glastonbury and also works as a teacher, has received the £5,000 prize for his debut The Perseverance. Described as “compelling” in the Guardian, the collection touches on family life, particularly the death of Antrobus’s father, his diagnosis with deafness as a small child, and his biracial heritage. It has also been longlisted for this year’s Folio prize.

Related: Generation next: the rise – and rise – of the new poets

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