Neil Astley

Neil Astley

Neil Astley (b. 12 May 1953, Portchester, Hampshire, England) is a British publisher, editor and writer.

Contents

Life and work

Astley grew up in Fareham, Hampshire, and was educated at Price's School, Fareham (1964–71), the Alliance Française, Paris (1972), and Newcastle University (1975–78; 1979–81).[1] From 1972 to 1975 he worked in Leicester, Colchester, London, Paris and Australia, as a journalist, in publishing (Yale University Press), and as a press officer for Warner Brothers’ magazine division and for Lyons Maid ice cream.[2] In his essay "The Story of Bloodaxe"[3] he recounts two early life-changing experiences, the first in France in 1972 when he "spent six months in post-'68 Paris...and was radicalised)". The second was in Darwin, Australia, where he was working as a sub-editor on the Northern Territory News: "On Christmas Day, 1974, Darwin was destroyed by Cyclone Tracy. I was trapped under a collapsed house. This brush with death was enough to send me post haste to Newcastle, where I was soon working as a bus conductor while waiting to start my course." In Newcastle upon Tyne, while studying for his degree at the university, he worked as production editor on Jon Silkin's Stand magazine for three years, helped organise poetry readings at Morden Tower and became involved with small press editing and publishing.[3]

Astley has been an organiser of Newcastle Literary Festival, and as a director for three years of the Poetry Book Society he was responsible for the addition of poetry in translation to the book club's remit. He has been a contributor to numerous radio and television programmes in Britain and Ireland, including the Today Programme, Front Row, Midweek and Start the Week on BBC Radio 4, The Verb on BBC Radio 3, GMTV's Sunday Programme, The Arts Show and Poetry Now on RTE.

Bloodaxe

After graduating in 1978 with a first in English, Astley founded his poetry publishing house Bloodaxe Books in Newcastle upon Tyne, which he ran alone from home while doing postgraduate research or other jobs until it could pay him a wage seven years later.[2] In 1982, Bloodaxe's first annual funding was secured from Northern Arts, bringing Simon Thirsk on board as co-director of the newly constituted Bloodaxe Books Ltd and giving the struggling imprint a sounder business base. Two years later he moved the press into its first office in the Exchange Buildings on Newcastle's Quayside.[3]

Currently Bloodaxe is based at Highgreen Manor in the Tarset Valley in Northumberland. As Bloodaxe's sole editor and managing director, Astley has published nearly a thousand books by over 300 writers, and he edits, produces and typesets all the press's annual output of around 30 new titles a year.[2]

Bloodaxe won the Northern Electric Arts Award in 1989 and the Sunday Times Small Publisher of the Year Award in 1990. In 1995 Astley was given an honorary D.Litt by Newcastle University,[1] and he has been a Visiting Fellow at Newcastle University's School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics since 2000, which has involved publishing the series of annual Newcastle/Bloodaxe Poetry Lectures given at the university.

Astley's stated aim has been to achieve editorial breadth and balance by publishing what he believes to be the best of many different kinds of poetry: "The only positive discrimination I have exercised has been in favour of literary quality",[2] which has involved commissioning several anthologies designed to redress imbalances in the availability of writing by women or minorities, including Jeni Couzyn’s Bloodaxe Book of Contemporary Women Poets (1985), E.A. Markham's Hinterland: Caribbean Poetry from the West Indies and Britain (1989), Linda France’s Sixty Women Poets (1993), Deryn Rees-Jones’s Modern Women Poets (2005), published as the companion anthology to a critical study, Consorting with Angels (2005), and Jeet Thayil's Bloodaxe Book of Contemporary Indian Poets (2008).

Astley "discovered" many of the most notable poets to emerge in British poetry over the past three decades: "Astley was the first to publish some of the major players", reported Daisy Goodwin in a 1993 Guardian profile,[4] these including Simon Armitage, David Constantine, Maura Dooley, Ian Duhig, Helen Dunmore, Jen Hadfield, Jackie Kay, Gwyneth Lewis, Glyn Maxwell, Sean O'Brien, Jo Shapcott and Pauline Stainer, many of whom are still published by him. Bloodaxe has attracted poets from other commerical poetry lists including Philip Gross and Susan Wicks from Faber, Selima Hill and Peter Reading from Chatto, R.S. Thomas from Macmillan, Ken Smith from Cape, Adrian Mitchell from Allison & Busby, Brendan Kennelly from a variety of Irish presses, and seven poets from the distinguished poetry list discontinued by Oxford University Press in 1999 (Fleur Adcock, Moniza Alvi, Roy Fisher, Carole Satyamurti, Penelope Shuttle, Anne Stevenson and George Szirtes).

Philip Gross and George Szirtes went on to win the T.S. Eliot Prize with Bloodaxe collections, as did Jen Hadfield from Shetland, with her second collection. He has also sought to redress the neglect of marginalised poets, publishing important collected editions of writers such as Martin Bell (1988), James Wright (1992), Basil Bunting (2000), Barry MacSweeney (2003), Martin Carter (2006), Arun Kolatkar (2010), A.S.J. Tessimond (2010) and Bernard Spencer (2011), as well as a seminal edition for readers of Edward Thomas, The Annotated Collected Poems (2008) edited by Edna Longley.[5]

In 1985 Astley encountered translations in an American magazine of poems by Irina Ratushinskaya, a young Russian poet then imprisoned in a Soviet prison camp for the "crime" of writing and distributing poems a judge had called "a danger to the state".[2] At the age of 28, she had been sentenced to seven years' hard labour. He commissioned a translator, David McDuff, to produce a book of her poetry in English, which he combined with documentary material on the poet's imprisonment obtained from Amnesty International. It included extracts from a camp diary charting life in the "Small Zone", a special unit for women prisoners of conscience in Mordovia where the poet was held. The the resulting book, No, I'm Not Afraid, was published in May 1986. An international campaign was mounted on her behalf, spearheaded by her own poetry, which led to her release in October 1986 on the eve of the Reykjavík Summit after Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan had been given copies of her book by David Owen.[3]

Astley also published Tony Harrison's v. (1985), a book-length poem set in a vandalised cemetery in Leeds during the Miners’ Strike. Two years after its publication, Richard Eyre’s film of the work on Channel 4 sparked a national furore not over Harrison’s left-wing politics but over his skinhead protagonist’s use of so-called "bad language".[3] Astley's response was to assemble a new edition of v. (1989) including the poem with documentation of the newspaper and other media coverage which became a set text on cultural studies courses.

Astley commissioned books representing or addressing the poetry of particular generations or periods in British and Irish poetry, including the anthologies A Rumoured City (intr. Philip Larkin, ed. Douglas Dunn, 1982), The New Poetry (ed. Michael Hulse, David Kennedy and David Morley, 1993), The Bloodaxe Book of 20th Century Poetry from Britain and Ireland (ed. Edna Longley, 2000), The New Irish Poets (ed. Selina Guinness, 2004), Voice Recognition (ed. James Byrne and Clare Pollard, 2009) and Identity Parade: New Poets from Britain and Ireland (ed. Roddy Lumsden, 2010), and books of essays such as Sean O'Brien's The Deregulated Muse (1998), Strong Words (ed. W.N. Herbert and Matthew Hollis, 2000) and Deryn Rees-Jones's Modern Women Poets (2005).

Reception

As editor at Bloodaxe for over 30 years Astley has been credited with "revolutionising" and democratising poetry publishing in Britain.[6] Praised for his "omnivorous inclusiveness",[7] he has given readers "as wide a range as possible of contemporary poetry by all kinds of writers",[3] in so doing bringing more readers to contemporary poetry. This involved overturning an earlier bias favouring Oxbridge-educated male writers from south-east England,[8] and publishing leading poets from America, the Caribbean and Europe (including many collections and anthologies of translated poetry from France, Russia, Eastern Europe and Scandinavia in particular), alongside books by new and established poets from all parts of Britain and Ireland, the latter ranging from modernists Basil Bunting and J.H. Prynne to performance poets John Agard and Benjamin Zephaniah.[2] He has sought to open up publishing opportunities for women poets, "not because they are women poets but because they are outstanding writers by any standard. For many years Bloodaxe has been unusual in having a poetry list which is 50:50 male: female",[3]and being "responsive to the changing literatures of Britain and of other countries", so that in 2010 it was possible for a leading Black British writer, Bernardine Evaristo, to observe that "a single imprint, Bloodaxe Books, publishes nearly all the poets not with specialist black and Asian imprints, while several other prominent UK poetry publishers do not publish any black or Asian poets from Britain".[9]

Astley has been called "the UK's leading anthologist",[10] best-known for Staying Alive: real poems for unreal times (2002), Britain's biggest selling anthology of contemporary poetry since publication, whose sales have exceeded 200,000 copies in 2010.[citation needed] It is one of several anthologies he has published aimed at broadening the readership of contemporary poetry and re-igniting the interest of readers who haven't read much poetry since school. A US edition was published in 2003 by Miramax, launched by Astley in New York as a book "for people who know they love poetry and for people who think they don't" at a reading shared with Meryl Streep, Claire Danes, Nina Cassian, Philip Levine, Glyn Maxwell, Paul Muldoon, Alice Quinn and Charles Simic.[11]Staying Alive was a controversial book, popular with readers and booksellers.[12] He has since published the sequels, Being Alive (2004), with a third companion volume, Being Human (2011). In 2008 he published In Person: 30 Poets, filmed by Pamela Robertson-Pearce, claimed to be "the world's first DVD-anthology",[13] consisting of films on two DVDs of six hours of readings by 30 poets with all the texts included in the accompanying anthology, and he has since produced films with Pamela Robertson-Pearce of over a hundred more poets reading their work for archive, internet videos and further DVD-books.

Writing

In 1982 Astley received an Eric Gregory Award from the Society of Authors for a short collection of his own poems, The Speechless Act, later published by the Mandeville Press in 1984. His first book-length collection, Darwin Survivor (Peterloo Poets, 1988), was given a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. A second book of poems, Biting My Tongue, followed in 1995. He has also published two novels, The End of My Tether (2002/2003), which was shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel Award, and The Sheep Who Changed the World (2005).

Bibliography

As editor (selected list)

Novels

  • The End of My Tether (Flambard Press, 2002; Scribner, 2003)
  • The Sheep Who Changed the World (Flambard Press, 2005)

Poetry collections

  • The Speechless Act (The Mandeville Press, 1984), Eric Gregory Award
  • Darwin Survivor (Peterloo Poets, 1988), Poetry Book Society Recommendation
  • Biting My Tongue (Bloodaxe Books, 1995)

References

  1. ^ a b Who's Who 2010 (A & C Black, 2009).
  2. ^ a b c d e f National Life Story Collection at the British Library Sound Archive (Book Trade Lives transcript)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "The Story of Bloodaxe: 1978-2008", In Person: 30 Poets, filmed by Pamela Robertson-Pearce, edited by Neil Astley (Bloodaxe Books, 2008), pp237-262.
  4. ^ Daisy Goodwin, "Bloody Riveting", The Guardian, 11 August 1993, Arts section 4-5.
  5. ^ Bloodaxe Books new books and complete list 2011.
  6. ^ "Bloodaxe Books", PBS Bulletin (Summer 1998).
  7. ^ Fred D'Aguiar, "Against Correctness", Poetry London, 66 (Summer 2010), 38.
  8. ^ "Neil Astley", Binary Myths 2: correspondences with poet-editors, ed. Andy Brown (Stride, 1999), 16-22; reprinted in Binary Myths 1 & 2 (Stride, 2004).
  9. ^ Bernardine Evaristo, "Why It Matters", Ten: new poets from Spread the Word (Bloodaxe Books/Spread the Word, 2010), 11-16.
  10. ^ "Bile, Guile and Dangerous to Poetry", 2005 StAnza Lecture, StAnza Poetry Festival, St Andrews, March 2005
  11. ^ Dinitia Smith, "Poetry and Actors in a Publicists Mix", New York Times, 24 May 2003.
  12. ^ "Bile, Guile and Dangerous to Poetry".
  13. ^ In Person: 30 Poets, filmed by Pamela Robertson-Pearce, edited by Neil Astley (Bloodaxe Books, 2008).

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of Newcastle University people — This article is a list of people who spent time at Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, as either a student or teacher. This is an incomplete list, which may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help… …   Wikipedia

  • Bloodaxe Books — is a British publishing house specialising in poetry.It was founded in 1978 in Newcastle upon Tyne by Neil Astley, who is still editor and managing director. He was joined in 1982 by chairman Simon Thirsk. Bloodaxe moved its editorial office to… …   Wikipedia

  • The Mersey Sound (book) — For other uses, see Mersey sound The Mersey Sound is an anthology of poems by Liverpool poets Roger McGough, Brian Patten and Adrian Henri first published in 1967, when it launched the poets into considerable acclaim and critical fame .… …   Wikipedia

  • Ann Sansom — is a British poet and writing tutor. She has written two full length collections of poetry (both published by Bloodaxe Books) and her work has appeared in anthologies, newspapers and magazines around the world. She is currently a regular tutor… …   Wikipedia

  • Ecopoetry — The term Ecopoetry has come into recent, popular use as a means of denoting poetry with a strong ecological emphasis or message.Naturally, across the ages, many poets, poems and books of poems have expressed ecological concerns; but it is only… …   Wikipedia

  • Dooley, Maura — (1957 )    Born in Truro, Cornwall, she grew up in Bristol, gained her B.A. from York University and her postgraduate certificate of education at Bristol University. She lives in London and is lecturer in creative writing at Goldsmiths College,… …   British and Irish poets

  • Herbert, W.N. — (1961 )    Born in Dundee, Scotland, he was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford. His doctorate on the work of Hugh MacDiarmid was published as To Circumjack MacDiarmid (1992). Herbert was Northern Arts Literary Fellow at Newcastle and Durham… …   British and Irish poets

  • Stainer, Pauline — (1941 )    Born in Burslem, Stoke on Trent, she graduated in English from St. Anne s College, Oxford, and took an M.Phil. at Southampton University. Her poetry explores sacred myth, legend, history inlandscape, and human feeling, with a strong… …   British and Irish poets

  • Eric Gregory Award — The Eric Gregory Award is given by the Society of Authors to British poets under 30 on submission. The awards are up to a sum value of £24000 annually.Winners*2008: Emily Berry, Rhiannon Hooson, James Midgley, Adam O Riordan, Heather Phillipson… …   Wikipedia

  • 1982 in literature — The year 1982 in literature involved some significant events and new books.Events* La Bicyclette Bleue ( The Blue Bicycle ) by Régine Deforges becomes France s best selling novel ever.New books*Isabel Allende La casa de los espíritus (The House… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

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