词条 | Stephen Watson (poet) |
释义 |
| name = Stephen Watson | image = Poet Stephen Watson.jpg | image_size = 199px | birth_date = {{birth date|1954|11|6|df=y}} | birth_place = Cape Town, South Africa | death_date = {{death date and age|2011|4|10|1954|11|6|df=y}} | death_place = Cape Town, South Africa | occupation = Poet, academic | nationality = South African | magnum opus = | influences = | influenced = }} Stephen Watson (6 November 1954 – 10 April 2011) was a South African poet. Most of his poetry is about the city of Cape Town, where he lived most of his life. He was a professor in English at the University of Cape Town. He was also the Director of the Writing Centre there, and one of the founders of the Creative Writing Program. Creatively, he believed that poetry and literature can stand on their own and need not refer to politics, or the struggle for liberation, in order to be valid.[1] He took a strong stand on poetic relativism, believing it was possible and desirable to differentiate between "good" and "bad" poetry - a stance that has drawn criticism.[2] As a literary critic, Watson suggested that "South Africa is held together by a nexus of peoples 'dreaming' each other in terms of the myths that the distance between them creates."[3] Watson was anchored at the University of Cape Town for most of his career. In his poetry, he was best known as a lyrical chronicler of the Cape’s natural beauty, documenting the response of the soul when surrounded by it. His intertwinedness with the landscape spilled into his prose, too: he memorably wrote about his “love affair” with the city’s mountains last year, in what might be cast as a follow-up essay to his landmark 1990 piece, "In These Mountains". Although poetry was Watson’s chief metier, he distinguished himself as an essayist, writing on subjects near and far, as diverse as South African "black" poetry and Leonard Cohen.[4] In February 2006, the normally reclusive Watson made the mainstream news when, writing in New Contrast, he launched an attack on Antjie Krog, accusing her of plagiarism. He claimed that she "lifted the entire conception of her book [the stars say 'tsau' ] from [his] Return of the Moon", and that she also plagiarised from the work of Ted Hughes. Krog strongly denied the claims.[5][6] In January 2011, Watson received the English Academy’s Thomas Pringle Award for a short story, "Buiten Street", published in New Contrast. His poetry featured in the most recent edition of Poetry International – South Africa, where further biographical information is available. Stephen Watson died on 10 April 2011 after suffering from cancer.[4] Poetry
Other works
References1. ^Charlotte Otter, "Poets and Politics" Charlotte's Web, 12 November 2007. 2. ^Titlestad: Aesthetes and democrats: reading the critical reception of The heart in exile and Sue Clark's The False Bay cycle {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080330062457/http://www.chico.mweb.co.za/art/2008/2008jan/080118-shift.html |date=30 March 2008 }} 3. ^Watson, S. 1980. The Liberal Ideology and Some South African Novelists. Cape Town: University of Cape Town. 4. ^1 "Stephen Watson, RIP"{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, Books Live, 11 April 2011. 5. ^Antjie Krog denies plagiarism claims {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070814151746/http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=264818&area=%2Fbreaking_news%2Fbreaking_news__national%2F |date=14 August 2007 }} 6. ^Rory Carroll, [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2006/feb/21/books.southafrica/ "South African author accused of plagiarism"], The Guardian, 21 February 2006.
External links
5 : 1954 births|2011 deaths|South African poets|University of Cape Town academics|20th-century poets |
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