Bathanti was born July 20, 1953, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and grew up in the East Liberty area of Pittsburgh.[1][2] His grandparents were immigrants from Italy and France. His working-class family included a steelworker father and a seamstress mother.[1]
Bathanti lives in Vilas, North Carolina, with his wife, Joan, and two children. Bathanti and his wife met while both were working with the VISTA program.[5]
Career
After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh, Bathanti traveled to North Carolina in 1976 as part of the Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA) program focusing on prison outreach.[3] He has continued to teach writing and hold workshops in prisons ever since.[5]
From 1985 to 1989, he worked closely with the North Carolina Visiting Artist Program which sought to bring talented artists from different disciplines to more rural towns and areas in the state.[5] His book They Changed the State: The Legacy of North Carolina’s Visiting Artists, 1971–95 chronicled the history of the program.[3]
He was installed as the seventh North Carolina Poet Laureate on September 20, 2012, at a ceremony in Raleigh, North Carolina.[5] Over the next two years he became an "ambassador of N.C. literature" and was free to create his own long-term projects. The position requires the laureate to participate in various literary activities across the state, working with "schools, community groups, and the press."[7]
Since his appointment, he has been a part of over 250 events around North Carolina. In 2014, Bathanti was named the first scholar-in-residence for the Heinz History Center's Italian American Program in Pittsburgh. Focusing on Italian American history, he will create a body of work developed from the center's Italian American Collection.[8]
In 2024, Bathanti was inducted into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame.[9]
Awards
Bathanti has received many awards and honors including:
^ abcdeCavanaugh, Kerry. "Biography for Joseph Bathanti". Pennsylvania Center for the Book. The Pennsylvania State University. Archived from the original on July 10, 2010. Retrieved November 6, 2012.