Patrick Cullinan

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Patrick Roland Cullinan
Born(1933-05-25)25 May 1933
Pretoria, South Africa
Died14 April 2011(2011-04-14) (aged 77)
Cape Town, South Africa
OccupationPoet, biographer
NationalitySouth African
RelativesSir Thomas Cullinan (grandfather)

Patrick Roland Cullinan (21 May 1932 – 14 April 2011) was a South African poet and biographer.

He was born in

Dante
.

Collections

Cullinan's poetry collections include The Horizon Forty Miles Away (1973), Today Is Not Different (1978), The White Hail in the Orchard (1984) and Selected Poems 1961 - 1991 (1992). The volume The White Hail in the Orchard contains what Cullinan called 'versions' by which he meant loose translations from the Italian poetry of Eugenio Montale.

Cullinan's poetry, often (in his earlier works) permeated by the Transvaal landscape, is most often concerned with the personal rather than the political; with emotional and metaphysical themes, such as his poem "My Predawn Owl".

Dante and Eugenio Montale. While he was inspired and informed by such European tradition, Cullinan firmly identified himself as an African writer:

I spent seven years, from the age of 14 to 21 in Europe (mainly, because I had no choice, in England), so I certainly ingested a great deal of European-ness. Therefore, when I came back to South Africa at the age of 21, I had a problem. Was I in fact a European, or an African? I remember sitting in a cottage in the Eastern Transvaal, on the Escarpment, thinking it through one night. When I woke up in the morning, I didn't have to think of it any longer: I was an African, and I always would be."[2]

In addition to volumes of his poetry, Cullinan also published a biography of

Robert Jacob Gordon (a Dutch traveller and soldier): Robert Jacob Gordon 1743 - 1795: The Man and His Travels at the Cape (1992), a semi-autobiographical work of prose fiction: Matrix (2002), and most recently, a collection of the letters of Bessie Head
: The Imaginative Trespasser (2005).

Just before his death, Cullinan published a significant new collection of his works spanning over thirty years, Escarpments.

Apartheid

Cullinan accepted the fact that writers ought to have been involved in the fight against apartheid in South Africa, while acknowledging the fact that is it difficult to produce a satisfactory political poem. Criticism has been levelled at Cullinan — that his work, throughout the Apartheid years in South Africa, did not engage with "the struggle" against apartheid. In the first edition of The Bloody Horse, Cullinan wrote:

To talk of 'literature', of good writing, of art may be obscene or almost obscene in a society as self-destructing, engrossed in conflict as this one is. But the important word is almost. For however cluttered by violence and potential annihilation a society may find itself, it is the writers and the artists who portray the reality of this process... There are multiple ways of telling the truth."[3]

This may be as good an encapsulation as any of the position of Cullinan's poetry in its political context. Cullinan believed that it was "the fanatical belief that politics is more important than art" which was slowing the process of South African poetry becoming "more sophisticated" and "less provincial": a limitation which he hoped the "New South Africa" after the first democratic elections in 1994 would remove.[2]

Honours

Cullinan won significant recognition in South Africa, and enjoys a reputation as arguably the most prominent South African poet alive at the end of the 20th century. Among the prizes he won are the Slug Award, the

Cavaliere’ on him for his translations of Italian poetry, in particular the work of Eugenio Montale
.

Fellow poets

Cullinan maintained close contact with other poets writing in South Africa, notably Gus Ferguson. Before their deaths, he was a friend and fellow writer to Lionel Abrahams, Guy Butler, Douglas Livingstone and Stephen Watson.

Cullinan made a significant contribution to South African poetry through his encouragement of young writers, both through his teaching, and through his willingness to mentor, support and constructively criticise. During his time at Oxford, he was similarly mentored by John Betjeman (who became a significant correspondent,[5]) - and so represented a unique link between a lyrical English verse tradition and following generations of English-speaking South African poets.

Prior to his retirement and his devotion to full-time writing, he lectured for many years at the University of the Western Cape. In retirement, he lived in Cape Town, South Africa.

Bibliography

Poetry
  • The Horizon Forty Miles Away. Polygraph (1963)
  • Today is not Different. David Philip (1978)
  • The White Hail in the Orchard. David Philip (1984)
  • I Sing Where I Stand: Versions from the Afrikaans of Phil du Plessis: Poesie 1892–1984. Vooraand (1985)
  • Selected Poems, 1961–1991. Artists' Press (1992)
  • Selected Poems, 1961–1994. Snailpress (1994)
  • Mantis Poets: Guy Butler/Patrick Cullinan. David Phillips Publishers (1998)
  • Transformations. Snailpress (1999)
  • Escarpments (Poems 1973–2007). Umuzi Random House (2008)
Anthology
  • Lionel Abrahams: A Reader. (ed) Ad Donker (1988)
  • Dante in South Africa. (ed with Stephen Watson) Centre for Creative Writing, University of Cape Town (2005)
Biography
  • Robert Jacob Gordon
    1743–1795: The Man and His Travels at the Cape
    . Winchester Struik (1992)
  • Imaginative Trespasser: Letters from Bessie head to Patrick and Wendy Cullinan 1963-1977. Johannesburg: Wits University Press (2005).
Novel
  • Matrix. Snailpress (2002)

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Poem reproduced at Poetry International Web". My Predawn Owl. 2003.
  2. ^ a b "A Modern Sense of Disquiet": Patrick Cullinan interviewed by Michael King and Stephen Watson in New Contrast Literary Journal, December 1992.
  3. ^ "Citation in blog 'North of the Latte Line'". Blog Comment. 27 February 2005.
  4. ^ "English Academy South Africa: Schreiner Prize Winners". Award Annals. 26 May 2006. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  5. ^ "John Betjeman Archives at UVic Libraries Gateway". Betjeman Archives. 1 January 2006.

External links