Biographical
Information
Caribbean
poet, playwright, and art critic, awarded the Nobel Prize in 1992. Walcott's
writings deal with the Caribbean encounter, convergence and conflict of
different races,HYI cultures, languages and traditions, including African,
British, and French. His work attempts to bring together and explore the
continuities and ruptures between past and present, the classical and
the postcolonial, the Western and the non-Western.
Born in 1930 in Castries, St. Lucia. St. Lucia is Caribbean island of
the West Indies, Lesser Antilles group, formerly a British possession.
It is located about 25 miles south of Martinique and 20 miles north of
St. Vincent, about 250 miles north of the coast of Venezuela
Mixed-race background, father a painter and poet of Caribbean, British
and Dutch ancestry, mother a Methodist teacher native of the West Indies
(1)
Studied at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica
Founded the Trinidad Theater Workshop (1959)
Studied theatre in the United States under a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship
MacArthur Foundation Genius Award (1981)
Alternated living in Trinidad and in Boston, Massachusetts, teaching at
Harvard and Boston University
Nobel Prize (1992)
Main Works
Drama:
Harry
Dernier (1952)
Ti-Jean and His Brothers (1957)
Dream on Monkey Mountain (1967)
The Joker of Seville (1974)
Remembrance (1977)
Pantomime (1978)
A Branch of the Blue Nile (1983)
The Odyssey (1992)
Poetry:
25 Poems
(1948)
In a Green Night (1962)
Another Life (1973)
Sea Grapes (1976)
Midsummer (1984)
Omeros (1990) (click here for notes and study questions)
The Bounty (1997)
Tiepolo's Hound (2000)
Selected Quotations
"The
stalls of the market contained the Antilles'
history as well as Rome's, the fruit of an evil,
where the brass scales swung and were only made level
by the
iron tear of the weight, each brass basin
balanced on a horizon, but never equal,
like the old world and and new, as just as things might seem." (Omeros,
Ch. VII )
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