Stephen Collis is a Canadian poet and professor.[1] Collis is the author of several books of poetry, including On the Material (Talonbooks, 2010) and three parts of the on-going “Barricades Project”: Anarchive (New Star, 2005), The Commons (Talonbooks, 2008, 2014), and To the Barricades (Talonbooks, 2013). He is also the author of three books of non-fiction: Almost Islands: Phyllis Webb and the Pursuit of the Unwritten (Talonbooks, 2018), Dispatches from the Occupation (Talonbooks, 2012), and Phyllis Webb and the Common Good (Talonbooks, 2007). In 2011, he won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize for the collection On the Material (Talonbooks, 2010).[2] In 2019, he won the Latner Writers' Trust Poetry Prize.[3] He wrote Mine in 2001, Anarchive in 2005 and The Commons in 2008, and was previously shortlisted for the Dorothy Livesay Award in 2006 for Anarchive.[4] He teaches poetry and American literature at Simon Fraser University.[5]
Collis' poem "Golfing St. George's Hill with Sean Bonney" (2016) describes a visit with the poet Sean Bonney to the golf course at St George's Hill, which was the site of an occupation by the Diggers in 1649 and today is part of a gated community, and draws on the proclamation made there by Gerrard Winstanley.[11] Daniel Eltringham has argued that Collis' work, as well as that of Bonney and others, is part of a broader turn in 21st-century poetry to themes of commons and enclosure.[12]