Poet and University of Virginia English professor Kiki Petrosino has been named the winner of the University of North Texas’s 2021 Rilke Prize, worth $10,000, for a poetry collection she penned about what it means to be Black in America and to search for one’s ancestors.
In 2015, following the death of her maternal grandmother, Petrosino embarked on a journey to understand more about her ancestors. She took a DNA test and combed through archival documents in search for answers.
“White Blood: A Lyric of Virginia” is a culmination of that ancestral research. In it, Petrosino weaves together a variety of poetic forms – villanelles, a heroic crown and erasure – to explore her Black heritage and larger societal issues with the legacy of slavery and race relations in America.
“I’m thrilled by this recognition,” she said. “I wrote ‘White Blood’ for my family, to honor the legacies of my ancestors, and the fact that readers are holding this book close to their hearts means more to me than I can say. I’m filled with wonder and gratitude for this chance to connect.”

