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Her subject matter includes political themes, such as gender and nation, as well as the problems of form and genre; she has written works that explore literary forms such as the pastoral, epic, and weather forecast. Her books include XEclogue (1993); Debbie: An Epic (1997), nominated for a Governor General’s Award; The Weather (2001), which Robertson wrote during her Judith E. Wilson fellowship at Cambridge University; The Men (2006); R’s Boat (2010); 3 Summers (2016); and Lisa Robertson’s Magenta Soul Whip (2005), which was named one of the New York Times’s 100 Notable Books of 2010, long-listed for the 2011 Warwick Prize for Writing, and was shortlisted for the 2010 ReLit Award for Poetry. Robertson's ambulatory architectural essays are collected in Occasional Works and Seven Walks from the Office for Soft Architecture (revised ed. 2010), and she has published a work of prose essays, Nilling (2012). Robertson has been the subject of a special issue of Chicago Review and was the Holloway poet-in-residence at the University of California-Berkeley in 2006. In 2017, Robertson won the inaugural C.D. Wright Award for Poetry, and in 2005, she was awarded the PIP Gertrude Stein Awards for Innovative Poetry in English.
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