Anthony Kellman

Anthony Kellman
Born 24 April 1955 (1955-04-24) (age 61)
Barbados
Occupation Barbadian author and musician

Anthony Kellman (born 24 April 1955) is a Barbados-born poet, novelist, and musician. In 1990 the British publishing house Peepal Tree Press published his first full-length book of poetry, Watercourse, which was endorsed by the late Martiniquan poet Edouard Glissant and which launched Kellman’s international writing career.[1] Since 1990, he has published three novels, four CD recordings of original music, and four additional books of poetry, including Limestone: An Epic Poem of Barbados, the island's first published epic poem which covers over four centuries of Barbadian life.[2][3][4] In 1992 he edited the first full-length U.S. anthology of English-language Caribbean poetry, Crossing Water,[2][3][5][6] and in 1993, he won a USA National Endowment for the Arts literary award.[5][7] Kellman is the originator of the Barbados poetic form Tuk Verse, derived from melodic and rhythmical patterns of Barbados' indigenous folk music called Tuk.[3][4][7]

Early life

Kellman was born in Whitehall, St. Michael, Barbados and attended Combermere Secondary School. At the age of eighteen, he left for England, where he worked as a troubadour, playing pop and West Indian folk music on the pub and folk club circuit.[1] He also became involved in the London literary scene mainly through the Poetry Society and the late Peter Forbes, former Editor of London's Poetry Review. Members met at Earls Court Square to share and discuss their works.[8]

Career

When Kellman returned to Barbados, he took an English undergraduate degree at the University of the West Indies and published two poetry chapbooks, In Depths of Burning Light (1982) and The Broken Sun (1984), which drew praise from Kamau Brathwaite among others.[1] He worked as a newspaper reporter, an arts and literature review columnist, and in public relations first at the Central Bank of Barbados and then at the National Cultural Foundation, before immigrating to the U.S. in 1987.[6] His experiences at the Central Bank provided inspiration for his first novel The Coral Rooms (1994).[1] In 1987 he studied for a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing at Louisiana State University.[6] After completing in 1989 he joined the English Department at Augusta University, where he is Professor Emeritus of English & Creative Writing. He's been the longest-serving Director of the university's Sandhills Writers Conference & Series which he directed from 1989 to 2015, a period which featured major national and international authors such as Ray Bradbury, Maxine Hong Kingston, Derek Walcott, Edward Albee, Gloria Naylor, and Rick Bragg, to name a few.[6] Kellman was the Founder and coordinator of the Summerville Reading Series, a community literary and musical performance series (1989–1994), and the Winter Gathering of Writers (1990–2010).[6]

In 1992 he edited the first full-length U.S anthology of English-language Caribbean poetry, Crossing Water,[3][7] and, in 1993, he won a USA National Endowment for the Arts literary award.[3][5] He won the 2011 Prime Minister's Award (Barbados) for his poetry manuscript South Eastern Stages which highlighted his Tuk Verse forms and which was published in 2012.[5]

Kellman's creative and critical writing have been published in anthologies and literary periodicals in the Caribbean, Latin America, the USA, England, Wales, Canada and India.[3][5] In 1998, his first theoretical essay on Tuk Verse was published in the London international magazine Wasafiri.[9] He finds considerable resonances between the Caribbean and the Southern states of the USA, which feed into his poetry, where blue jays, dogwoods and wisteria rub shoulders with angel fish, sugarcane and coral reefs. All his work has a powerful involvement with landscape, both as a living entity shaping peoples’ lives and as a source of metaphor for inner processes.[2] The limestone caves of Barbados have provided a particularly fertile source of inspiration.[2] Kellman's imagistic style (in his poems, novels and songs) moves between the indigenous and the international, the concrete and the universal, Barbadian vernacular English and standard English, the personal and the public, and between the contemporary moment and the historical past.[2] Kellman continues to compose and perform eclectic folk songs in the World Music/Singer-songwriter genres.[10][11] His four albums are Wings of a Stranger (2000), Limestone (2005) (both companions to the poetry books by the same titles), Bloodmates (2010), and Come Again: The Best of Anthony Kellman (2011).[11]

Publications (Books)

Further reading

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Anthony Kellman". Peepal Tree Press. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Limestone". Peepal Tree Press. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Margin: Exploring Modern Magical Realism/ABOUT OUR CONTRIBUTORS". angelfire.com. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  4. 1 2 Nick Garrett (22 June 2015). "Kellman to present Tuk Verse at poetry reading". GReport. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Caribbean Writers: Conversation with a Dead Politician". caribbeanwriters.tumblr.com. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "Kellman, Anthony - Contemporary Poets". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  7. 1 2 3 David Starkey, ed. (5 July 2007). "Living Blue in the Red States" (PDF). University of Nebraska Press. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  8. "Anthony Kellman's Biography — Free listening, videos, concerts, stats and pictures at Last.fm". last.fm. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  9. "Wasafiri - The Magazine - Issue Archive - Issue 28 - Contents". wasafiri.org. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  10. Dr. Silvia Simone Anspach (22 September 2012). "Anthony Kellman's Polyphonic Poetic and Cultural Identity" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  11. 1 2 "Anthony Kellman – Limestone – CD Baby Music Store". cdbaby.com. Retrieved 2016-03-31.

External links

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