Duncan Glen

Duncan Glen

Professor Duncan Munro Glen (11 January 1933 – 20 September 2008) was a Scottish poet, literary editor and Emeritus Professor of Visual Communication at Nottingham Trent University. He became known to the literary world through his first full-length book, "Hugh MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance". He published many collections of poetry, from "Kythings and other poems" (1969), "In Appearances" (1971) and "Realities Poems" (1980) to "Selected Poems 1965-1990" (1991), "Selected New Poems 1987-1996" (1998) and "Collected Poems 1965-2005" (2006). His "Autobiography of a Poet" was published by Ramsay Head Press in 1986. He edited Akros magazine through 51 numbers from August 1965 and did much to promote Scottish poets and artists. He was a friend and early champion of Hugh MacDiarmid and Ian Hamilton Finlay among others, and produced several volumes of poetry, some of which was translated into Italian.

Glen was born in Westburn, Cambuslang, South Lanarkshire, Scotland, the son of a white collar worker in The Steel Company of Scotland, Hallside, near Newton Station. He was educated at West Coats Primary School in Cambuslang, then at Rutherglen Academy, though he left there when he was fifteen. He became an office boy then an apprentice printer in Glasgow and Kirkcaldy. He then studied at Edinburgh College of Art. Following national service in the RAF, where he was a photographic interpreter, he became a typographic designer with HMSO and did freelance typographic designing for publishers in London.

He then started on a career in graphic design education, first at Watford College of Technology and, following a brief spell as an editor in Glasgow with Robert Gibson & Sons Ltd, educational publishers, at what was to become Preston Polytechinc (and subsequently the University of Central Lancashire), later progressing to the Professorship of Visual Communication at what was to become Nottingham Trent University. Glen served on the Council of National Academic Awards.

Glen founded Akros Publications in 1965 with the aim of publishing Scottish poetry and literary criticism; from 1965-2006 over 250 publications appeared under the Akros imprint. They included not only poetry, critical and historical studies, Akros magazine and Zed 2 0 (19 numbers to date), but also fiction by Robert McLellan and John Herdman, amongst others.

As well as his own poetry, he produced a number of studies of Scottish literature, anthologies, and an impressive range of publications in other areas, including an influential history of typography. He found time to produce the definitive history of Cambuslang, a place for which he retained an obvious affection, and also a lengthy illustrated history of Kirkcaldy where he latterly lived.

He was elected Fellow of the Chartered Society of Designers in 1977. In 1974 and 1998 he received awards from the Scottish Arts Council "for services to Scottish literature" and "in recognition of his many years as a publisher and editor and entrepreneurial activities for Scottish literature". In 1991 he received The Howard Sergeant Memorial Award "in recognition of long and devoted services to poetry". In 2000 he was awarded the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters by Paisley University.

Bibliography

Works and anthologies by Duncan Glen in the National Library of Scotland and the British Library.

  • 21 poems after drawings, etc. by George Hollingworth, et al. 2000
  • Antigruppo Palermo, gruppoanti. 1974
  • Apprentice angel / Hugh MacDiarmid. 1963
  • Autobiography of a poet 1986
  • Bibliography of Scottish poets from Stevenson to 1974 compiled with an introduction by Duncan Glen with a preface by Hugh MacDiarmid 1974
  • Bonnie fechter [sound recording] : Alexander Scott 1920-1989. 1990
  • Bright they shine : Cambuslang poetry / by Patrick Hamilton ... [et al.] ; with an introduction by Duncan Glen. 2001
  • Builts and wellies, or, Sui generis a sequence of poems by Duncan Glen with illustrations by George Hollingworth. 1976
  • Christmas fable for Margaret Duncan Glen
  • Cled score poems Duncan Glen 1974
  • Clydesdale a sequence o poems by Duncan Glen 1971
  • Clydeside kinsfolk : the lives and times of a typically extended Lowland * Scottish family 1694 to 1994 : Cambuslang, * Rutherglen & East Kilbride / by Duncan Glen. 1995
  • Collected poems, 1965-2005 / by Duncan Glen. 2006
  • Echoes : frae classical and Italian poetry / by Duncan Glen. 1992
  • Elegies : a selection from 1966-2003 / by Duncan Glen. 2006
  • Essay in response to critical essays on contemporary Scottish poetry in Akros magazine / George Bruce ; edited by Duncan Glen. 2005
  • European poetry in Scotland an anthology of translations edited by Peter France & Duncan Glen 1989
  • Evergreen song lyrics : a selection from the poetry of the British Isles & America / chosen by Duncan Glen with commentaries. 2000
  • Extended Glen family of Cambuslang, Lanarkshire, Scotland & their descendants 1694-1998 / by Duncan Glen. 1998
  • Familiar epistles between William Hamilton of Gilbertfield in Cambuslang and Allan Ramsay in Edinburgh : with an extract from William Hamilton of Gilbertfield's version of Blind Harry's Wallace / edited with an introduction by Duncan Glen ; with prefaces by R.K.D. Milne and Neil McCallum. 2000
  • Feres poems by Duncan Glen. 1971
  • Five literati an anon (Scot lit. anti lit. pop) symposium created by Duncan Glen 1976
  • Follow! Follow! Follow! and other poems by Duncan Glen. 1976
  • Forward from Hugh MacDiarmid, or, Mostly out of Scotland being fifteen years of Duncan Glen, Akros Publications 1962-1977 by Duncan Glen with a check-list of publications, August 1962-August 1977. 1977
  • Four Scottish poets of Cambuslang & Dechmont Hill, 1626-1990 : Patrick Hamilton, Minister at Cambuslang 1626-1645, Lieutenant William Hamilton of Gilbertfield, Cambuslang [c.1665-1751], John Struthers, born at East Kilbride, and poet of Dechmont [1776-1850 and Duncan Glen. 1996
  • Friars of Berwick : a narrative poem in Scots / edited with an introduction by Duncan Glen. 2002
  • Gaitherings poems in Scots by Duncan Glen. 1977
  • Geeze! a sequence of poems by Duncan Glen. 1985
  • Graphic lines. 1975
  • Historic Fife Murders at Falkland, St. Andrews & Magus Muir : journeys through Fife between Forth and Tay / by Duncan Glen. 2002
  • Hugh Glen and the Victoria Drinking Fountain, Cambuslang : a family memoir. 2005
  • Hugh MacDiarmid & Duncan Glen : a prospect from Brownsbank : poems, biographical notes and a bibliography. 1998
  • Hugh MacDiarmid, a critical survey edited by Duncan Glen. 1972
  • Hugh MacDiarmid an essay for 11 August 1977
  • Hugh MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance. 1964
  • Hugh MacDiarmid, or, Out of Langholm and into the world
  • Hugh MacDiarmid: rebel poet and prophet. A short note on the occasion of his seventieth birthday. 1962
  • Illustrious Fife : literary, historical & architectural pathways & walks. 1998
  • In appearances. 1971
  • In place of wark, or, Man of art : a sequence in thirty pairts. 1977
  • In search of Serif Books, the Stanley Press & Joseph Mardel, publisher of Maurice Lindsay's Hurlygush and Sydney Goodsir Smith's Under the Eildon tree, & taking serious note of William Maclellan & Callum Macdonald : with photographs and illustrations. 2006
  • In the small hours, or, To be about to be a poem in thirty parts. 1984
  • Individual and the twentieth-century Scottish literary tradition. 1971
  • Inextinguishable part 14 of realities poems 1977
  • Ither sangs 1978
  • John Atman and other poems; with an introduction by Leonard Mason. 2001
  • Journey into Scotland : poems 1991
  • Journey past - a sequence o poems 1971
  • Keepsake for New Year 2000 from Akros Publications : poems. 2000
  • Kirkcaldy : a new illustrated history. 2004
  • Kirkcaldy : a photographic guide and introduction to the history of the town. 2005
  • Lanark & the Falls of Clyde ... : Lanarkshire past and present, a rediscovery & anthology. 2001
  • Literary masks of Hugh MacDiarmid. [Illustrated.] 1964
  • Long Calderwood, old East Kilbride ; and its associations with John & William Hunter and the poetry of Anne Hunter, Joanna Baillie & John Struthers, with a selection of poems by Anne Hunter and Joanna Baillie. 2005
  • Makars' walk. Walks in the old town of Edinburgh, with an anthology of poetry selected and walked by Duncan Glen 1990
  • Morning taken with the sun : an anthology of poems in short shining stanzas / [selection and design, Duncan Glen] 2001
  • Mr & Mrs J.L. Stoddart at home a poem by Duncan Glen 1975
  • Nation in a parish : a new historical prospect of Scotland from the parish of Cambuslang 1995
  • New history of Cambuslang 1998
  • Nottingham : a poem 1984
  • Nuova poesia Scozzese / [edited by] Duncan Glen, [translated by] Nat Scammacca. 1976
  • Nuova Scozia : undici poesie di Duncan Glen / scelte e tradotte dallo scozzese da Enzo Bonventre. 1996
  • Of marks & memories : a gallimaufry of printers', publishers' and others' marks, devices, emblems, crests, arms, symbols or logos 2005
  • Of philosophers and tinks. A sequence of poems. 1977
  • On midsummer evenin merriest of nichts? 1981
  • Orchardlands & Avondale & Bothwell ... : Lanarkshire past and present, a rediscovery & anthology 2001
  • Out to the Calf of Man, September 1989 : a poem and etchings. 1990
  • Photographic celebration at the ruins of Bighty Farm 2002
  • Poems in Scots Hugh MacDiarmid [edited by Duncan Glen] 1963
  • Poems on art works : a selection by Duncan Glen. 2003
  • Poetry of the Scots : an introduction and bibliographical guide to poetry in Gaelic, Scots, Latin and English 1991
  • Poets & paintings : reinterpretations : an essay 2003
  • Preston Polytechnic poets : Duncan Glen, Ian Harrow, Philip Pacey, Hugh Probyn / edited by Duncan Glen ; with illustrations by John Hodkinson. 1977
  • Preston's new buildings by John Brook and Duncan Glen with photographs by Myra Jones and John Brook 1975
  • Printing type designs : a new history from Gutenberg to 2000. 2001
  • Querencia : saggio di traduzione poetica / Enzo Bonventre. 1994
  • Ravenscraig Castle : with illustrations of Pathhead, Sinclairtown & Dysart 2001
  • Realities poems by Duncan Glen 1980
  • Robert Louis Stevenson and the Covenanters on the Bass Rock & 'The tale of Tod Lapraik' 2002
  • Ruined rural Fife churches / photographed and introduced by Duncan Glen, with a selection of photographs of other ruined buildings. 2002
  • Ruins of Newark Castle, St. Monans, autumn 2002 / introduced and photographed by Duncan Glen. 2003
  • Scottish literary periodicals : three essays / David Finkelstein, Margery Palmer McCulloch, Duncan Glen. 1998
  • Scottish literature : a new history from 1299 to 1999 1999
  • Scottish poetry now as seen from London by Simon Foster 1966
  • Seasons of delight : an anthology of poems on gardens, flowers, greenwoods & the sea / compiled and edited by Duncan Glen & Margaret Glen. 1998
  • Selected elegies : poems with photographs / by Duncan Glen. 2001
  • Selected essays of Hugh MacDiarmid edited with an introduction by Duncan Glen 1969
  • Selected new poems : nineteen-eighty-seven to nineteen-ninety-six 1998
  • Selected poems 1965 - 1990. 1991
  • Selected Scottish and other essays / by Duncan Glen ; with an introduction by John Herdman. 1999
  • Seventeen poems. 1997
  • Situations - a sequence of poems by Duncan Glen with illustrations by Derek Carruthers 1984
  • Something of the night and of the sun / [selection and design, Duncan Glen] 2001
  • Splendid Lanarkshire : past and present : a rediscovery and anthology of prose & verse / written and compiled by Duncan Glen. 1997
  • Spoiled for choice poems by Duncan Glen 1976
  • State of Scotland a poem by Duncan Glen 1983
  • Stevenson's Scotland / edited by Tom Hubbard & Duncan Glen. 2003
  • Stones of time. A sequence of poems by Duncan Glen. 1984
  • Sunny summer Sunday afternoon in the park? 1969
  • Tales to be told - poems by Duncan Glen. 1987
  • Ten bird sangs by Duncan Glen 1978
  • Ten sangs by Duncan Glen. 1978
  • Ten sangs of luve by Duncan Glen. 1978
  • "This is no can of beans" : a prospect from the window of a small-press publisher by Duncan Glen]. 1999
  • Three/trittico translators of poems by Duncan Glen : Nat Scammacca, Enzo Bonventre, Marco Scalabrino : Scots and English, Italiano and Siciliano. 2001
  • Traivellin man. A sequence o poems by Duncan Glen with frontispiece by John Hodkinson. 1977
  • Trittico scozzese : Duncan Glen, J.K. Annand, Hugh MacDiarmid / cura e traduzione dallo Scots di Enzo Bonventre ; traduzione in siciliano di Marco Scalabrino. 2001
  • Turn of the earth a sequence of poems by Duncan Glen. 1985
  • Twenty of the best : [and one more for good measure] : a Galliard anthology of contemporary Scottish poetry / edited by Duncan Glen ; with drawings by Alfons Bytautas. 1990
  • Unnerneath the bed / a poem by Duncan Glen. 1970
  • Upper Clydesdale ... : Lanarkshire past and present, a rediscovery & anthology / by Duncan Glen. 2001
  • Weddercock; or, Tale of the ill-taen caller at Easter Greenlees Ferm on 3 August 1910 a poem by Duncan Glen 1976
  • Whither Scotland? a prejudiced look at the future of a nation. Edited by Duncan Glen. 1971
  • William Maclellan's Scottish journal / images chosen and introduced by Duncan Glen. 2004
  • William Williamson: Kirkcaldy architect by Duncan Glen. 2008
  • Winter : a poem : and other verses / by James Thomson ; edited with an introductory essay by Duncan Glen. 2002

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Duncan McKay — is a fictional character in the BBC Scottish drama TV series Monarch of the Glen. Duncan is played by Scottish actor Hamish Clark. Ranger at Glenbogle, Duncan has always had a crush on cook Lexie MacDonald. He proposed to her, bought a dress for… …   Wikipedia

  • Duncan MacKay — or Duncan McKay may refer to: Duncan MacKay (footballer) Duncan Mackay (musician) Duncan McMillan Mickey MacKay (1894 1940), Canadian professional ice hockey centre Duncan McKay (Monarch of the Glen), a character from Monarch of the Glen This… …   Wikipedia

  • Glen Duncan — is a British author born in 1965 in Bolton, Lancashire, England to an Anglo Indian family. He studied philosophy and literature at Lancaster University.In 1990 Glen moved down to London, where he worked as a bookseller for Dillons for four years …   Wikipedia

  • Duncan (surname) — Duncan is a surname. For the etymology of the surname Duncan this web page cites: Dictionary of American Family Names. Another opinion is that the Gaelic Donnchadh is composed of the elements donn, meaning brown ; and chadh, meaning chief or… …   Wikipedia

  • Glen Garioch — Distillerie Pays Écosse Ville Old Meldrum (Highlands) Coordonnées …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Duncan Thompson — Thomson in 1925 Personal information Full name Duncan Fulton Thompson Nickname …   Wikipedia

  • Duncan Macrae (actor) — Duncan Macrae (20 August 1905 23 March 1967) was one of the leading Scottish actors of his generation. He worked mainly as a stage actor, with only a limited number of screen appearances. He was born at 118 Kirkland Street, Maryhill, Glasgow, the …   Wikipedia

  • Duncan Ban MacIntyre — Memorial Greyfriars Kirkyard Donnchadh Bàn Mac an t Saoir (usually Duncan Ban MacIntyre in English; 20 March 1724 – 14 May 1812)[1] is one of the most renowned of Scottish Gaelic poets and formed an integral part of one of the golden ages of …   Wikipedia

  • Duncan U. Fletcher High School — Fletcher Crest Established 1937 Type Public Principal Dane Gilbert …   Wikipedia

  • Glen Orchy — (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann Urchaidh) is a long glen in Argyll and Bute in Scotland. It runs south westerly from the Bridge of Orchy (gbmapping|NN298392) to Inverlochy (gbmapping|NN194277) following the River Orchy.One of the better known… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”