Caryl Phillips
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other Caryl Phillips (born 13 March 1958) is a Kittitian-British novelist, playwright and essayist. Best known for his novels (for which he has won multiple awards), Phillips is often described as a Black Atlantic writer, since much of his fictional output is defined by its interest in, and searching exploration of, the experiences of peoples of the African diaspora in England, the Caribbean and the United States.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn As well as writing, Phillips has worked as an academic at numerous institutions including Amherst College, Barnard College, and Yale University, where he has held the position of Professor of English since 2005.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Life
Caryl Phillips was born in St. Kitts to Malcolm and Lillian Phillips on 13 March 1958.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When he was four months old, his family moved to England and settled in Leeds, Yorkshire.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1976, Phillips won a place at Queen's College, Oxford University, where he read English, graduating in 1979.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While at Oxford, he directed numerous plays and spent his summers working as a stagehand at the Edinburgh Festival.Template:Sfn On graduating, he moved to Edinburgh, where he lived for a year, on the dole, while writing his first play, Strange Fruit (1980), which was taken up and produced by the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Phillips subsequently moved to London, where he wrote two more playsTemplate:Snd Where There is Darkness (1982) and Shelter (1983)Template:Snd that were staged at the Lyric Hammersmith.Template:Sfn
At the age of 22, he visited St. Kitts for the first time since his family had left the island in 1958.Template:Sfn The journey provided the inspiration for his first novel, The Final Passage, which was published five years later.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After publishing his second book, A State of Independence (1986), Phillips went on a one-month journey around Europe, which resulted in his 1987 collection of essays The European Tribe.Template:Sfn During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Phillips divided his time between England and St. Kitts while working on his novels Higher Ground (1989) and Cambridge (1991).Template:Sfn At that time, Phillips was a member of the Black Bristol Writers Group, which helped to foster his creative writing.[1]
In 1990, Phillips took up a Visiting Writer post at Amherst College in Amherst, Massachusetts. He remained at Amherst College for a further eight years, becoming the youngest English tenured professor in the US when he was promoted to that position in 1995.Template:Sfn During this time, he wrote what is perhaps his best-known novel, Crossing the River (1993), which won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.Template:Sfn After taking up the position at Amherst, Phillips found himself doing "a sort of triangular thing" for a number of years, residing between England, St Kitts, and the U.S.Template:Sfn
Finding this way of living both "incredibly exhausting" and "prohibitively expensive", Phillips ultimately decided to give up his residence in St. Kitts, though he says he still makes regular visits to the island.Template:Sfn In 1998, he joined Barnard College, Columbia University, as the Henry R. Luce Professor of Migration and Social Order.Template:Sfn In 2005 he moved to Yale University, where he currently works as Professor of English.Template:Sfn He was made an elected fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2000, and an elected fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 2011.Template:Sfn
Phillips supports football team Leeds United and watches "every game".Template:Sfn
Works and critical reception
Phillips has tackled themes on the African slave trade from many angles, and his writing is concerned with issues of "origins, belongings and exclusion", as noted by a reviewer of his 2015 novel The Lost Child.[2] The Atlantic Sound has been compared to the travel writing in Looking for Transwonderland, by Nigerian writer Noo Saro-Wiwa.[3]
Phillips received the PEN/Beyond Margins Award for Dancing in the Dark in 2006.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Activism
Phillips is the patron of the David Oluwale Memorial Association, which works to promote the memory of the death of David Oluwale, a Nigerian man in Leeds who was persecuted to death by the police.[4] On 25 April 2022 Phillips unveiled a Leeds Civic Trust blue plaque commemorating Oluwale's death, which was torn down hours later.[5]
Bibliography
Novels
- The Final Passage (Faber and Faber, 1985, Template:ISBN; Picador, 1995, paperback Template:ISBN)
- A State of Independence (Faber and Faber, 1986, Template:ISBN; paperback Template:ISBN)
- Higher Ground: A Novel in Three Parts (Viking, 1989, Template:ISBN)
- Cambridge (Bloomsbury, 1991; Vintage, 2008, paperback Template:ISBN)
- Crossing the River (Bloomsbury, 1993, Template:ISBN)
- The Nature of Blood (1997; Vintage, 2008, paperback Template:ISBN)
- A Distant Shore (Secker, 2003, hardback Template:ISBN; Vintage, 2004, paperback Template:ISBN)
- Dancing in the Dark (Secker, 2005, Template:ISBN)
- Foreigners: Three English Lives (Harvill Secker, 2007, Template:ISBN)
- In the Falling Snow (Harvill Secker, 2009, hardback Template:ISBN; Vintage, 2010, paperback Template:ISBN)
- The Lost Child (Oneworld Publications, 2015, Template:ISBN hardback, 978-1780747989 paperback)
- A View of the Empire at Sunset: A Novel (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2018, hardback, Template:ISBN)
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Essay collections
- The European Tribe (Faber and Faber, 1987)
- The Atlantic Sound (Faber and Faber, 2000, Template:ISBN)
- A New World Order: Selected Essays (Martin Secker & Warburg, 2001, Template:ISBN)
- Colour Me English (Harvill Secker, 2011, paperback Template:ISBN)
As editor
- Extravagant Strangers: A Literature of Belonging (Faber and Faber, 1997, Template:ISBN)
Plays
- Strange Fruit (Amber Lane Press, 1980, Template:ISBN)
- The Shelter (Amber Lane Press, 1984, Template:ISBN)
- Playing Away (Faber and Faber, 1987, Template:ISBN)
- A Kind of Home – James Baldwin in Paris (BBC Radio 4, 9 January 2004)[10]
- Hotel Cristobel (BBC Radio 3, 13 March 2005)[11]
- A Long Way from Home (BBC Radio 3, 30 March 2008)[12][13]
Awards
- 1987 Martin Luther King Memorial Prize, The European Tribe
- 1993 Guggenheim Fellowship
- 1994 Lannan Literary Award
- 1994 James Tait Black Memorial Prize, Crossing the River
- 2000 Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
- 2004 Commonwealth Writers Prize, Crossing the River
- 2006 Honorary Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford
- 2006 Commonwealth Writers Prize, A Distant Shore
- 2011 Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts
- 2012 Best of the James Tait Black, shortlist, Crossing the River[14][15]
References
Notes
Sources
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Further reading
- Charras, Françoise, "De-Centering the Center: George Lamming's Natives of My Person (1972) and Caryl Phillips's Cambridge (1991)", in Maria Diedrich, Carl Pedersen and Justine Tally (eds), Mapping African America: History, Narrative Form and the Production of Knowledge. Hamburg: LIT, 1999, pp.Template:Nbsp61–78.
- Joannou, Maroula. "'Go West, Old Woman': The Radical Re-Visioning of Slave History in Caryl Phillips's Crossing the River", in Brycchan Carey and Peter J. Kitson (eds), Slavery and the Cultures of Abolition: Essays Marking the Bicentennial of the British Abolition Act of 1807. Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 2007.
- Ledent, Bénédicte. Caryl Phillips. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002.
- Muñoz-Valdivieso, Sofia, "'Amazing Grace': The Ghosts of Newton, Equiano and Barber in Caryl Phillips's Fiction"Template:Dead link, Afroeuropa 2, 1 (2008).
- O'Callaghan, Evelyn. "Historical Fiction and Fictional History: Caryl Phillips's Cambridge", Journal of Commonwealth Literature 29.2 (1993): 34–47.
External links
- Caryl Phillips' official website
- The Caryl Phillips Bibliography
- Caryl Phillips' Writers Page at the British Council
- Phillips at Yale University
- Caryl Phillips Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
- "'Lost Child' Author Caryl Phillips: 'I Needed To Know Where I Came FromTemplate:'", NPR interview, 21 March 2015.
Template:Commonwealth Writers' Prize: Best Book Winners
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Woodward, Gerard, "The Lost Child by Caryl Phillips, book review: Wuthering Heights relived in post-war Britain", The Independent, 26 March 2015.
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- ↑ "A Kind of Home: James Baldwin in Paris", Friday play, BBC Radio 4.
- ↑ "Hotel Cristobel", Drama on 3, BBC Radio 3.
- ↑ "A Long Way from Home", Drama on 3, BBC Radio 3.
- ↑ "A Long Way from Home, by Caryl Phillips", Drama on 3, BBC .
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1958 births
- 20th-century British novelists
- 20th-century English male writers
- 20th-century British essayists
- 21st-century English male writers
- 21st-century British essayists
- 21st-century novelists
- Alumni of the Queen's College, Oxford
- Black British writers
- British dramatists and playwrights
- British male dramatists and playwrights
- British male essayists
- British male novelists
- British non-fiction writers
- British republicans
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- James Tait Black Memorial Prize recipients
- Living people
- PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction winners
- Saint Kitts and Nevis emigrants to the United Kingdom
- Saint Kitts and Nevis literature
- Saint Kitts and Nevis writers
- Writers from Leeds