Paula Meehan (born 1955) is an Irish poet and playwright.
Outside school, she was a member of a dance drama group, became involved in band culture and, around 1970, began to write lyrics. Gradually composing song lyrics would give way to writing poetry.
At Trinity College, Dublin, (1972–1977) she studied English, History and Classical Civilization, taking five years to complete her Bachelor of Arts degree. This included one year off, spent travelling through Europe. While a student she was involved in street theatre and various kinds of performance.
After college she travelled again, spending long stretches in Greece, Germany, Scotland and England. She was offered a teaching fellowship at Eastern Washington University where she studied (1981–1983) with James J. McAuley in a two-year programme which led to a Master of Fine Arts degree in Poetry. Gary Snyder and Carolyn Kizer were among the distinguished visiting writers to have a profound influence on her work and on her thought. The Wake Forest Book of Irish Women's Poetry: 1967 – 2000, Wake Forest University Press, 1999.
She returned to Dublin in 1983.
The 2015 Poetry Competition 'A Poem for Ireland' shortlisted her 1991 poem 'The Statue of the Virgin at Granard Speaks' in the final ten poems. A Poem for Ireland: Shortlist. RTE
Meehan was a judge for the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize.
In 2023, she was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin.
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