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Walcott, who died in Saint Lucia, was famous for his monumental body of work that wove in Carribean history, particularly his epic Omeros

The poet and playwright Derek Walcott, who moulded the language and forms of the western canon to his own purposes for more than half a century, has died aged 87.

His monumental poetry, including 1973’s verse autobiography, Another Life, and his Caribbean reimagining of The Odyssey, 1990’s Omeros, secured him an international reputation which gained him the Nobel prize in 1992. But this was matched by a theatrical career conducted mostly in the islands of his birth as a director and writer with more than 80 plays to his credit.

Born on Saint Lucia in 1930, Walcott’s ancestry wove together the major strands of Caribbean history, an inheritance he described famously in a poem from 1980’s The Star-Apple Kingdom as having “Dutch, ******, and English in me, / and either I’m nobody, or I’m a / nation”. Both of his grandmothers were said to have been descended from slaves, but his father, who died when Walcott was only a year old, was a painter, and his mother the headmistress of a methodist school - enough to ensure that Walcott received what he called in the same poem a “sound colonial education”. He published his first collection of poems – funded by his mother – at the age of 19. A year later, in 1950, he staged his first play and went to study English literature, French and Latin at the newly established University College of the West Indies in Jamaica.

After graduating in 1953 he moved to Trinidad, where he founded the Trinidad Theatre Workshop in 1959. It was an island recently vacated by VS Naipaul, a contemporary of Walcott’s whose career advanced in eerie synchronicity – from early dreams of a life in literature to Nobel success. Naipaul was first to find a London publisher, Walcott first to find favour with the Swedish Academy - but their contrasting approach to the legacy of empire soured their early friendship, igniting a feud which reached its apogee when Walcott read out an attack in verse at the 2008 Calabash festival in Jamaica: “I have been bitten, I must avoid infection / Or else I’ll be as dead as Naipaul’s fiction.”

Walcott continued his project to make the western canon his own, summoning up the spirits of Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Yeats and Eliot in a series of collections which explored his position “between the Greek and African pantheon”. His decision to write mostly in standard English brought attacks from the Black Power movement in the 1970s, which Walcott answered in the voice of a mulatto sea-dog in The Star-Apple Kingdom: “I have no nation now but the imagination./ After the white man, the ******s didn’t want me/ when the power swing to their side./ The first chain my hands and apologize, ‘History’ / the next said I wasn’t black enough for their pride.” His 1990 epic, Omeros, tackled the ghost of Homer head on, relocating Achilles, Helen and Philoctetes among the island fishermen of the West Indies.

A 1981 MacArthur “genius” grant cemented Walcott’s links with the US, first forged during a Rockefeller fellowship begun in 1957. Teaching positions at Boston, Columbia, Rutgers and Yale followed, but his teaching style, which he described as “deliberately personal and intense”, got him into trouble. Two female students at two universities accused him of interfering with their academic achievements after they rejected his advances. One case was settled out of court, but this was said to have counted against him when he was passed over for the post of poet laureate in 1999. It was also the focus of an anonymous smear campaign which forced him to withdraw his candidacy for the post of Oxford professor of poetry in the notorious 2009 election campaign for the post, and which forced the resignation of his rival Ruth Padel only nine days into her term, after it emerged that she had sent details of a book discussing both cases to a journalist at the Evening Standard. Walcott won the TS Eliot prize in 2011 two years later, with his collection White Egrets.

His later work circled around the question of whether “frequent exile turns to treachery”. While 2000’s Tiepolo’s Hound was anchored in the power of the home landscape, 2005’s The Prodigal despairs of an earlier vow to stay true to the local. “Approbation had made me an exile,” he wrote, “my craft’s irony was in betrayal, / it widened reputation and shrank the archipelago / to stepping stones, oceans to puddles, it made / that vow provincial and predictable”.

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Thanks for posting this, Mr T. I am particularly grateful to Derek Walcott for enriching my knowledge of Caribbean culture. He was one of the region's best men of letters and not surprisingly the powerful countries recognized his value.

FM

The world is saddened by the loss of Derek Walcott.  He was a stalwart and renowned scholar in the literary field.  May his work live on to inspire future generations especially the students in the Caribbean.

Bibi Haniffa
Prashad posted:

This Walcott was involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit by a female white student.

Of course he peddled 17th C English culture so no wonder your rage.

When an Indian pistol whipped another Indian, and got away because he was a PPP minister what did you say. When the son of a prominent Indian sexually harassed an Indian female and then his father paid off the cops to drop the charges what did you say. And another PPP minister, drunk and hit an Indian and wasn't charged, nothing from you.

I guess your Indesh will be filled with rapes, drunken driving, and assaults and this wouldn't matter because it is Indo on Indo and rich Indos can treat the less affluent Indians as they wish with no consequences.

FM
caribny posted:
Prashad posted:

This Walcott was involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit by a female white student.

Of course he peddled 17th C English culture so no wonder your rage.

When an Indian pistol whipped another Indian, and got away because he was a PPP minister what did you say. When the son of a prominent Indian sexually harassed an Indian female and then his father paid off the cops to drop the charges what did you say. And another PPP minister, drunk and hit an Indian and wasn't charged, nothing from you.

I guess your Indesh will be filled with rapes, drunken driving, and assaults and this wouldn't matter because it is Indo on Indo and rich Indos can treat the less affluent Indians as they wish with no consequences.

When Corbin raped Honoman's daughter what was the outcome? Keep braying.........

GTAngler
GTAngler posted:
caribny posted:
Prashad posted:

This Walcott was involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit by a female white student.

Of course he peddled 17th C English culture so no wonder your rage.

When an Indian pistol whipped another Indian, and got away because he was a PPP minister what did you say. When the son of a prominent Indian sexually harassed an Indian female and then his father paid off the cops to drop the charges what did you say. And another PPP minister, drunk and hit an Indian and wasn't charged, nothing from you.

I guess your Indesh will be filled with rapes, drunken driving, and assaults and this wouldn't matter because it is Indo on Indo and rich Indos can treat the less affluent Indians as they wish with no consequences.

When Corbin raped Honoman's daughter what was the outcome? Keep braying.........

The carib was jumping for joy. Revenge against the white planter indirectly.

Prashad
caribny posted:
Prashad posted:

This Walcott was involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit by a female white student.

Of course he peddled 17th C English culture so no wonder your rage.

When an Indian pistol whipped another Indian, and got away because he was a PPP minister what did you say. When the son of a prominent Indian sexually harassed an Indian female and then his father paid off the cops to drop the charges what did you say. And another PPP minister, drunk and hit an Indian and wasn't charged, nothing from you.

I guess your Indesh will be filled with rapes, drunken driving, and assaults and this wouldn't matter because it is Indo on Indo and rich Indos can treat the less affluent Indians as they wish with no consequences.

So Carib are you saying that it is okay to tell your student. "let's forget about work and get between the sheets and spend a few hours with each other".?

 

Prashad
GTAngler posted:
.

When Corbin raped Honoman's daughter what was the outcome? Keep braying.........

Focus on how Indians treat other Indians. Obviously creating your New Indesh isn't going to make Indians any safer.  Focus on THAT!

FM
Prashad posted:
 

So Carib are you saying that it is okay to tell your student. "let's forget about work and get between the sheets and spend a few hours with each other".?

 

And that happens quite often and often its the student making that offer. This scenario is hardly unique.  Of course the man is a "17th century pirate" so you make much of it. Noteworthy if both him and the student were Indian you would say NOTHING!

FM
Prashad posted:

The carib was jumping for joy. Revenge against the white planter indirectly.

One can only wonder if your selection of your wife is because she has very recent white ancestry. Like at your old avatar. Clearly a white man.

FM
caribny posted:
Prashad posted:
 

So Carib are you saying that it is okay to tell your student. "let's forget about work and get between the sheets and spend a few hours with each other".?

 

And that happens quite often and often its the student making that offer. This scenario is hardly unique.  Of course the man is a "17th century pirate" so you make much of it. Noteworthy if both him and the student were Indian you would say NOTHING!

Carib if Walcott was East Indian and not black and did that to a white female student then white people would have roast his behind until he became whiter than a Jamaican or Trinidadian Arab. When you are black you can get away with alot of stuff.  With your scotch thrown in for free.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

I suppose when people dead we should forget about their misgivings. 

That hound dog Derek Walcott is always flirting, says woman at centre of Oxford poetry scandal

 

 

Rarely can so much dirty laundry have fluttered in the quadrangles of Oxford. The ancient universities are well accustomed to poisonous rows, literary and otherwise. But in the long history of academic spats, they have seldom been as salacious or well broadcast as the latest scandal to hit the university.

In just a few short weeks, the furore has claimed both a Nobel Laureate and Oxford's newly installed professor of poetry, fuelling the chatter at literary dinner parties and suburban barbecues alike.

Derek Walcott, recognised as one of the greatest living poets in the English language, has been depicted as a voracious womaniser, preying on his female students.

 
N M Kelby

War of words: Nicole Kelby made her claim against Derek Walcott when she was one of his students

 

Ruth Padel, his rival for the professor of poetry chair, has been portrayed as an ambitious schemer whose briefing of journalists about complaints from Mr Walcott's past has led to a grotesque and very public smear against a bona fide genius.

In neither case, it should be said, are the facts entirely clear, and neither contender is in a mood to shed more light.

Caribbean-born Walcott, who described the rumour-mill as 'a degrading attempt at character assassination', withdrew from the Oxford race and is now due to take up a post at a university in Alberta, Canada. Padel was briefly appointed to the professorship but resigned nine days later.

There are other 'victims', too, of course, who should not be forgotten. These are the young female students - and there have been at least three - whose past claims against Walcott are at the root of the unedifying saga.

Most of them have preferred to remain anonymous. However, one has now come forward to speak for the first time about an episode that turned her life upside down, and drove her, reluctantly, to sue Derek Walcott, a man whom she still regards as one of the greatest voices in contemporary literature.

Nicole Kelby has no desire for vengeance. But her story is a disturbing insight into the sexually charged atmosphere of life in the literary world. It is a world in which, behind the supposedly safe walls of ancient institutions, egotism and libido are given free rein, and conventional boundaries may be transgressed.

Perhaps Leslie Epstein, the director of Nicole's Boston University programme in creative writing, put it best. Speaking at the time of Nicole's complaint of sexual harassment, he said: 'No one cries in chemistry classes, but we do here.' Few know the truth of this better than Nicole.

Determined to make it as a writer, Nicole gave up a successful job in television and was offered a place starting in autumn 1993 on the prestigious creative writing course at Boston University, led by Walcott.

In retrospect, it might seem strange but Nicole had no concerns about his reputation as a womaniser, despite warnings from friends. In July 1993 she enrolled on a summer workshop at a university in Tennessee where Walcott was lecturing - but it was strictly his professional ability that she was concerned about.

Nicole says: 'I didn't care about his personal life. I just wanted to know if he was a good teacher. That was all that mattered to me.'

Even so, Walcott, 27 years her senior, made an immediate impact. 'He was taller than me, but not by much,' Nicole says in an interview at her home in Florida, where she now makes a living as a successful novelist under the name N.M. Kelby.

 
Derek Walcott

Charisma: Derek Walcott 'was like a rock star', says Nicole Kelby... 'Women were drawn to him - they were like groupies'

'He was fit for his age. Quick eyes. I was impressed with how kind he was to me. He said, "Sit!" So I sat. He stood. We talked about writing. He said, "Tomorrow you will have dinner with Sigrid [Walcott's partner] and me."'

The next night, Nicole took her seat at a table where Mr Walcott, surrounded by a group of students and Sigrid, was holding forth.

Three-times divorced, Walcott has had no shortage of female admirers. As Sigrid, the owner of an art gallery, explained after his 1992 Nobel victory: 'I was worried about our relationship. There were many women around. Speaking generally, West Indian men like to hop from flower to flower.'

And Walcott, says Nicole, was happy to play up to the stereotype.

'Derek was like a rock star in a way,' she says. 'There were young women who were drawn to him because they wanted something from him. They were like groupies. Maybe they wanted him to help publish their work. Maybe they wanted to sleep with him. It's amazing what people do.'

But so far as she could see, he had no interest in his students. 'I believed that despite his demeanour, he respected us. We certainly respected him,' she says.

Nicole recalls a conversation one evening between the writer and a group of students. 'He discussed how important it was to take care of your body because you have a limited time to work. He compared it to being an athlete.

'All of a sudden, he said to a poet who was in our group, "Woman, get me a drink!" It was understood to be a joke. It was a parody of how people saw him to be.

'The world of literature is very political. He once told me, "The key to winning a Nobel is to keep your lips in constant motion. There are a great many asses to kiss."'

Walcott's defenders have said that his close, somewhat emotional relationships with his students are part of his creative approach. Certainly this is how Nicole understood it at the time.

'He could be difficult and exacting,' she says. 'One student turned in a poem about going to her high school reunion. He belittled it. He said it was terrible.'

When officials at Tennessee reprimanded him for the tirade, he lashed out at their 'backwater' attitudes. 'He was quick to anger,' Nicole says.

On another occasion, she recalls, he was irked when he discovered she had not informed him that the large Victorian house she shared with her second husband had been burgled - a strangely possessive reaction.

He is a complicated man, says Nicole. 'But if he thought you were a serious writer with talent, he would take you into his heart.

 
Ruth Padel

Ruth Padel, Walcott's rival for the seat of Oxford Professor of Poetry, briefed journalists about his past

'I was born with a medical condition called scoliosis and have a 60-degree curve in my spine. I used to hunch my shoulders. He said, "You should stand up straight and be proud. Beautiful women shouldn't walk that way because the bastards will try to bring you down."'

On the final day of her course in Tennessee, Walcott kissed Nicole on the lips. Perhaps it should have sounded alarm bells. But he was demonstrative with everyone in his inner circle, including men. 'He hugged and kissed everyone he cared about,' she says.

That autumn, Nicole, then 37, said a temporary farewell to her husband and moved into halls of residence at Boston University for the start of her creative writing programme - and resumed her friendship with Walcott.

'That first day, Derek told me to go to his office and we would walk to class together,' she recalls. Walcott had a limp - he told her it was the result of a snorkelling accident - and she helped him as he walked.

'He steadied himself on my arm, as a father would. He said, "You and I, standing on this corner, on this day, this small moment, will be something we will never forget." I took it to mean that it was the beginning of our relationship as professor and student.'

A key part of the course at Boston involved students submitting a play - one of them would see their work staged at the university. Nicole's effort, with a Holocaust theme (her Jewish mother had escaped Nazi-occupied Paris), went down well.

'Derek was very complimentary about my play,' she says. Indeed, according to Walcott's own sworn testimony in the later legal action brought by Nicole, he believed it deserved to win the competition.

Warmed by his approbation, Nicole had no qualms about spending time with the greying professor. Certainly she was happy to join him one evening in November 1993 when he entertained a group of his friends and colleagues for dinner at Caffe Lampara, an Italian restaurant in Boston.

Walcott had taught at Boston and nearby Harvard for more than a decade and had quite a following among the students. It was just a year since he'd won the Nobel Prize for Literature with what the judges described as a 'poetic oeuvre of great luminosity'.

It did no harm that he was also hugely entertaining company - charismatic, if earthy, with a nice line in self-deprecating humour.

According to court papers relating to Nicole's case, he snapped his fingers and told her to sit next to him. It was the kind of jocular command he had harmlessly issued to countless women in her presence. She obeyed.

Asked why he chose her on this particular occasion, Walcott testified: 'She was pleasurable company.'

 
N.M. Kelby in 1994

Nicole Kelby in 1994, in the wake of the incident that led her to accuse Derek Walcott of sexual harassment

After paying the bill - Walcott was also generous - he solicitously hailed a taxi for Nicole. And in the few brief moments that followed, everything changed.

As they waited for the taxi, Nicole held a bundle of magazines for him. Then, according to court records, he allegedly remarked: 'Well, how about going back to [my] place, forgetting about the magazines and the TV and just getting into bed?'

Nicole's reaction was not favourable. She recoiled at the advance, say the court papers.

But there was more to come. His next tactic was a threat: unless she acquiesced, he would block production of her Holocaust play, it was claimed. But still she resisted.

'I felt so shocked. I didn't see myself that way. I'm not the kind of woman who would use sex to get ahead,' Nicole says.

She is at pains to say that she is not thin-skinned. After a career in the rough and tumble of television, it takes more than a clumsy proposition to put her off her stride.

But the threat to her play from a tutor she trusted was, she says, completely undermining. It brought her to the edge of a personal crisis.

'Professor Walcott had told me my work was good, that it was important,' she says, trying to sum up her feelings about that time. 'Now I didn't know what to believe.'

It was the last she would hear from him. Whether his threat was carried out or not, her play was not produced. Nicole abandoned her course in despair.

'I went home in debt because I had student loans of more than $50,000. My second marriage eventually fell apart under the strain.

'My husband felt I should have stuck it out. My father also was furious with me. He died a few years later, still angry at me. I was devastated. I was completely lost.'

Angered and distressed beyond measure, she launched a legal action - the proceedings would drag on for 18 months.

She sued both Walcott and the university for sexual harassment. She said that the university 'knew or should have known of Derek Walcott's past acts of sex discrimination, including sexual harassment'.

It was one of these past acts that Ruth Padel would refer to when she sent her now infamous email to a journalist. An 18-year-old Harvard student had complained that Walcott had asked her to sleep with him in 1981 and, when she refused, he marked her poetry with a grade C, deriding it as 'formless, rhythmless and incomplete'.

The Harvard authorities ruled that the teenager's complaint had 'merit' but contended that the professor had her best interests at heart



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FM
Drugb posted:

In fact I hate to tarnish this man's memory but he did it all by himself anyway. They even have a square in St Lucia named after him. 

So true. Without the sexual harassment, he was a very brilliant man.

Prashad

A couple of years ago I read a book on Sri Lanka written by an American Fulbright scholar.  She quoted him thrice in her book saying "the best travel is motionless."  I have never read anything written by Derek Walcott. I watched Bill Moyers interviewed him.  Moyers would tangled him up in the end. 

Billy Ram Balgobin
caribny posted:
GTAngler posted:
.

When Corbin raped Honoman's daughter what was the outcome? Keep braying.........

Focus on how Indians treat other Indians. Obviously creating your New Indesh isn't going to make Indians any safer.  Focus on THAT!

Indian on Indian violence justifies Black on Indian violence weather it be just a crime or biased attacks.  That is Carib in a nutshell.

 

Billy Ram Balgobin

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