James Martin Fenton (born 25 April 1949, Lincoln) is an English poet, journalist and literary critic. He is a former Oxford Professor of Poetry.
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Life and career
Born in Lincoln, Fenton grew up in Lincolnshire and Staffordshire, the son of Canon John Fenton, a noted biblical scholar.[1] He was educated at the Durham Choristers School, Repton and Magdalen College, Oxford. He graduated with a B.A. in 1970.[2]
Fenton acquired at school an enthusiasm for the work of W.H. Auden. At Oxford John Fuller, who happened to be writing A Reader's Guide to W.H. Auden at the time, further encouraged that enthusiasm. Auden became possibly the greatest single influence on Fenton's own work.
In his first year at university Fenton won the Newdigate Prize for his sonnet sequence Our Western Furniture.[2] Later published by Fuller's Sycamore Press, it largely concerns the cultural collision in the 19th century between the United States and Japan. It displays in embryo many of the characteristics that define Fenton's later work: technical mastery combined with a fascination with issues that arise from the Western interaction with other cultures. Our Western Furniture was followed by Exempla, notable for its frequent use of unfamiliar words, as well as commonplace words employed in an unfamiliar manner.
His first collection, Terminal Moraine (1972) won a Gregory Award.[2] With the proceeds he traveled to East Asia, where he wrote of the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, and the end of the Lon Nol regime in Cambodia which presaged the rise of Pol Pot. The Memory of War (1982) ensured his reputation as one of the greatest war poets of his time.[2]
Fenton returned to London in 1976. He was political correspondent of the New Statesman, where he worked alongside Christopher Hitchens, Julian Barnes and Martin Amis.[2] He became the Assistant Literary Editor in 1971, and Editorial Assistant in 1972.[3] Earlier in his journalistic career, like Hitchens, he had written for Socialist Worker, the weekly paper of the British trotskyist group then known as the International Socialists.[4] In 1983 Fenton accompanied his friend Redmond O'Hanlon to Borneo. A description of the voyage can be found in the book "Into the Heart of Borneo".
Fenton won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize in 1984 for Children in Exile: Poems 1968-1984. He was appointed Oxford Professor of Poetry in 1994, a post he held till 1999.[3] He was awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 2007.
He has said, "The writing of a poem is like a child throwing stones into a mineshaft. You compose first, then you listen for the reverberation."
Fenton has been a frequent contributor to The Guardian,[5] The Independent and The New York Review of Books.[6] He also writes the head column in the editorials of each Friday's "Evening Standard."[7] In 2007 he appeared in a list of the "100 most influential gay and lesbian people in Britain" published by The Independent on Sunday.[8] His partner is Darryl Pinckney, the prize-winning novelist, playwright and essayist perhaps best-known for the novel High Cotton (1992).
Awards and honours
- 1968 Newdigate Prize
- 1971 Eric Gregory Award
- 1981 Southern Arts Literature Award for Poetry
- 1983 Fellowship of The Royal Society of Literature
- 1984 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize
- 1994 Oxford Professor of Poetry
- 1994 Whitbread Prize for Poetry, for Out of Danger
- 1999 Honorary Fellowship of Magdalen College
- 2003 Fellowship of The Royal Society of Arts
- 2007 Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry
Books
- 1968 Our Western Furniture, poetry[3]
- 1969 Put Thou Thy Tears Into My Bottle, poetry[3]
- 1972 Terminal Moraine[3]
- 1978 A Vacant Possession, TNR Publications[3]
- 1980 A German Requiem: A Poem, Salamander Press, a pamphlet[3]
- 1981 Dead Soldiers, Sycamore Press[3]
- 1982 The Memory of War: Poems 1968-1982, Salamander Press, 1982, ISBN 9780907540397[3]
- 1984 Children in Exile: Poems 1968-1984 Random House, 1984, ISBN 9780394533605 These poems combined with those from The Memory of War made up the Penguin volume, The Memory of War and Children in Exile; published in the United States as Children in Exile; Salamander Press
- 1983 You Were Marvellous, selected theatre reviews published 1979-1981[3]
- 1986 The Snap Revolution
- 1987 Partingtime Hall, co-author with John Fuller, Viking / Salamander Press, comical poems[3]
- 1988 All the Wrong Places: Adrift in the Politics of the Pacific Rim, reportage; Viking; Atlantic Monthly Press (1988); reissued with a new introduction by Granta (2005)[3]
- 1989 Manila Envelope, self-published book of poems[3]
- 1994 Out of Danger, Fenton considers this his second collection of poems. It contains Manila Envelope and later poems; Penguin; Farrar Straus Giroux; winner of the Whitbread Prize for Poetry[3]
- 1998 Leonardo's Nephew, art essays from The New York Review of Books[3]
- 2001 The Strength of Poetry: Oxford Lectures, Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 9780198187073[3]
- 2001 A Garden from a Hundred Packets of Seed Viking / Farrar, Straus and Giroux[3]
- 2002 An introduction to English poetry, Editor James Fenton, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002, ISBN 9780374104641[3]
- 2003 The Love Bomb, verse written as a libretto for a composer who rejected it; Penguin / Faber and Faber[3]
- 2006 School of Genius: A History of the Royal Academy of Arts, (2006) a history[3]
- 2006 Selected Poems, Penguin[3]
- 2006 The New Faber Book of Love Poems, as editor
References
- ^ Daily Telegraph (9 January 2009)Obituary: Canon John Fenton
- ^ a b c d e British Council profile
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u [1] Web page titled "Books by Fenton" at the James Fenton Web site, accessed 11 October 2007
- ^ Poetry Foundation profile
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/jamesfenton
- ^ http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/james-fenton/
- ^ http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard-home/columnistarchive/James%20Fenton-columnist-1245-archive.do
- ^ The Independent, (6 May 2007), The pink list 2007: The IoS annual celebration of the great and the gay. Retrieved 25 June 2007.
Sources
- Gioia, Dana. "The Rise of James Fenton", The Dark Horse (No. 8, Autumn 1999)
- Hulse, Michael. "The Poetry of James Fenton", The Antigonish Review Vol. 58. pp. 93–102, 1984
- Kerr, Douglas. "Orientations: James Fenton and Indochina", Contemporary Literature, Vol. 35, No. 3 (Autumn, 1994) pp 476–91