![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
| Home | About this site | Author index | Awards and prizes | News | Events |
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
Barry UnsworthBarry Unsworth
Back |
Genres |
Bibliography |
Prizes and awards |
Critical perspective  
BiographyNovelist Barry Unsworth was born in 1930. He grew up in a small mining community in County Durham, in the north of England. After studying English at Manchester University and completing two years national service, he lived in France for a year where he taught English. He travelled extensively in Greece and Turkey during the 1960s, teaching at the Universities of Istanbul and Athens.
Barry Unsworth lives in Umbria, Italy. He was awarded an honorary Litt.D. by Manchester University in 1998.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction     BibliographyThe Partnership New Authors, 1966 The Greeks Have a Word For It Hutchinson, 1967 The Hide Gollancz, 1970 Mooncranker's Gift Allen Lane, 1973 The Big Day Michael Joseph, 1976 Pascali's Island Michael Joseph, 1980 The Rage of the Vulture Granada, 1982 Stone Virgin Hamish Hamilton, 1985 Sugar and Rum Hamish Hamilton, 1988 Sacred Hunger Hamish Hamilton, 1992 Morality Play Hamish Hamilton, 1995 After Hannibal Hamish Hamilton, 1996 Losing Nelson Hamish Hamilton, 1999 The Songs of the Kings Hamish Hamilton, 2002 The Ruby in her Navel Hamish Hamilton, 2006 Land of Marvels Hutchinson, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1974 Heinemann Award Mooncranker's Gift 1980 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Pascali's Island 1992 Booker Prize for Fiction (joint winner) Sacred Hunger 1995 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Morality Play    
  Critical PerspectiveBarry Unsworth is often thought of as an historical novelist. In one sense the description is unarguable, since a great deal of his work is set in the past, for example in the late Ottoman Empire (Pascali’s Island, 1980), The Rage of the Vulture (1982), in the Atlantic slave trade (Sacred Hunger, 1992), in medieval England (Morality Play, 1995), in ancient Troy (The Songs of the Kings, 2002). Furthermore, several of his novels involve transactions between past and present, in which present-day characters are imaginatively drawn to or influenced by historical antecedents – the restorer at work in Venice in Stone Virgin (1985); the stalled novelist witnessing the Toxteth Riots in the Liverpool of Sugar and Rum (1988); the expatriate couple whose attempt to buy a house in Umbria seems to invoke conflict stretching from the Second World War back to the Carthaginian invasion in After Hannibal (1996); the biographer in Losing Nelson (1999).
In another sense, Unsworth clearly stands apart from much contemporary historical fiction, which is a sort of pageant-writing, unable to muster the three-dimensional imagination which truly animates the form. For Unsworth’s fiction, the past figures as something far more considerable than the product of careful research and costumed elsewheres: the pleasures of imagination disclose an intensity where pleasure draws close to pain. As well as sensual immediacy, Unsworth’s historical imagination also wields a critical power which exposes his present-day characters to their own weaknesses and shortcomings. History is not an escape-route. In dealing with historical characters he is strongly drawn to marginality and failure – the Turkish spy in Pascali’s Island whose meticulous reports are received and filed but never read; or the British spy, lost among the tombs of Istanbul in The Rage of the Vulture, while the dread regime itself is collapsing under the weight of its own arrogant inertia.
This eloquent sense of the irrelevance of the personal life to the grander movements of history and politics carries a strong reminder of Cavafy, whose most famous poem, ‘Waiting for the Barbarians’, is a classic account of having missed the historical moment while watching earnestly for its arrival. The suggestion of Cavafy’s work as a whole, that an eloquently dramatized futility can offer a kind of melancholy consolation for itself is, one suspects, very close to the heart of Unsworth’s concerns. As with Cavafy, the Mediterranean and Aegean world is the home of his imagination – the world of the Trojan wars, of Rome and the Ottoman empire, of the remembered fury of battle and the long, eventless aftermath where individuals must try to find a place for themselves. Unsworth is a distinguished member of the long and various tradition of English writer-travellers in the ancient world. Unlike some of its exponents, Unsworth has not been tempted into inert exoticism, though he is clearly drawn to the sensuality and glitter of Mediterranean light and landscape, to the textures of stone and water, which he can render with a poet’s rich economy. He is likewise drawn also to the sense of ancient mystery, of a world almost within reach. In contemplating this imaginative inheritance, Unsworth modifies the ‘heroic temper’ of Tennyson’s ‘Ulysses’ with a greater sense of human frailty, while affirming, like Ulysses, that ‘all experience is an arch wherethrough / Gleams that untravelled world, whose margin fades / For ever and for ever when I move.’
Sean O'Brien, 2006
 
  Author statement'As a child I was beset by the sense of secret pathways, tracks leading away from, running alongside, occasionally touching, the ones everyone knew about. They could be anywhere, wherever there was cover. There were privileged people who could step into them at will because they knew the access points. Or you could somehow blunder upon them.  
  Contact information
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The British Council is registered in England as a charity. Our privacy statement. Our Freedom of Information Publications Scheme. |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
| Developed and hosted by Artlogic Media Ltd London. | |||||||||