JOHN ROBERT LEE
Two books of essays on the work of Nobel laureate Derek Walcott were published in 2022. These are among the first reflective reviews of the man and his work since his death in St Lucia in 2017.
Here are brief notes on the books. They will make valuable additions to libraries and the collections of those who want to better understand the substantial contribution of this Caribbean poet to world literature.
Tributes to Derek Walcott, 1930-2017: In Various Light, edited by Helen Goethals and Eric Doumerc, is a collection of scholarly essays, memoirs and creative work which looks at various aspects of the enduring influence of Walcott.
Variety is the key feature this approach, since the collection includes essays and poems by well-known Caribbean poets like Fred d'Aguiar, John Robert Lee, Kwame Dawes and Lorna Goodison; academic articles by researchers like Norval Edwards from Jamaica and Florence Labaune-Demeule from France; as well as creative contributions from John Thieme, Jackie Hinkson and Mervyn Taylor.
The book is arranged in four sections. Inheritance places Walcott's poetry firmly in the tradition of British poetry, while Other Arts seals with the ground-breaking nature of his dramatic writing.
The section entitled Not Vassals but Princes considers ways his work introduced a Caribbean flavour into the English language. And the final section, Legacy celebrates his enduring influence on other poets.
The various sections, and the light that each sheds on Walcott’s work, are held together by Helen Goethals' introduction, which frames the whole enterprise as being based on the concepts of "inheritance” and “legacy” inherent in these “tributes.”
As these tributes show and as Walcott himself so often affirmed, literature constitutes the living proof of the necessary continuity between the terms: it is not only after but through the acknowledgement of an inheritance that a legacy is made possible.
[caption id="attachment_992623" align="alignnone" width="635"] Between Fury and Peace: The Many Arts of Derek Walcott -[/caption]
The title of Between Fury and Peace: the Many Arts of Derek Walcott, a book of essays, comes from Walcott’s poem The Season of Phantasmal Peace. The editor, Askold Melnyczuk, had attended Walcott’s classes at Boston University and was witness to the many friendships that mattered to Walcott. In his introduction he says the poet and playwright used his verse “as a vehicle of thought,” poetry that “probed neo-colonial narratives, deriding empire’s assumptions and scorning its self-regard and privileges.”
Twenty-five writers are collected here, all who knew Walcott well in various capacities – poets, novelists, editors, essayists, playwrights, translators. Among them are Pulitzer Prize winners and Guggenheim Fellowship awardees.
The essays vary in type and include letters between writers, reminiscences and analyses of plays and poetry. Walcott’s generosity as well as his mercurial pers