Robert Crawford (Scottish poet)

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Robert Crawford

Born1959 (age 64–65)
Bellshill, Scotland
EducationHutchesons' Grammar School
Alma materGlasgow University
Balliol College, Oxford
Occupation(s)Poet, scholar and critic
AwardsEric Gregory Award; Scottish Arts Council Book Award

Robert Crawford FRSE FBA (born 1959) is a Scottish poet, scholar and critic. He is emeritus Professor of English at the University of St Andrews.[1]

Early life[edit]

Robert Crawford was born in Bellshill, Scotland, and grew up in Cambuslang. He was educated at the private Hutchesons' Grammar School and in the same city at Glasgow University, where he received his M.A. degree. He then went to Balliol College, Oxford, where he received his D. Phil.

Family[edit]

His paternal grandfather was a Minister in the Church of Scotland and Crawford considers himself a "Christian with a Presbyterian accent, rather than a Protestant", which he feels has rather assertive overtones in the contemporary West of Scotland.[2] He has written on the relationship between science and religion[3] as well as religious poetry.[4]

Themes[edit]

His main interest is in Post-Enlightenment Scottish literature,[5] including Robert Burns[6] and Robert Fergusson,[7] but he has a keen interest in contemporary poetry,[8] including Edwin Morgan,[9] Douglas Dunn[10] and Liz Lochhead.[11]

Crawford is a prolific and successful poet and concerns himself with the nature and processes of creative writing.[12] He has a particular interest in the work of T. S. Eliot[13] and other aspects of Modernism.

He is interested in the relationship between literature, particularly poetry, and modern science, including information technology.[14] He says he shares an appreciation of poetry and science as kinds of discovery quickened by observation and imagination. He even goes so far as to claim that it "is part of the poet's delight even duty, to use such [scientific] words and experience in poetry".[15]

The geography and place names of Scotland feature very prominently in his own poems and he takes a lively interest in the developing politics of contemporary Scotland, as well as science, politics, religion, landscape, and environment and spirituality.[16] Many of his poems also deal with gender and sex (particularly married sex).[17]

Language[edit]

Crawford writes in a modern English, with a few nods to dialect words, with an occasional made-up word or a word borrowed from technical science. The main forms he uses are short and lyrical. He has translated from the 17th-century Latin of the Aberdeenshire poet Arthur Johnston.

He was a founder of the international magazine Verse in 1984 and worked as poetry editor for the Edinburgh publisher Polygon in the 1990s. With Simon Armitage, he is co-editor of The Penguin Book of Poetry from Britain and Ireland since 1945 (1998) and, with Mick Imlah, he co-edited The New Penguin Book of Scottish Verse (2000). He publishes poetry and occasional works of criticism in the London Review of Books and The Times Literary Supplement.

Awards[edit]

He has won several prizes, notably

He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE). In August 2011 he was elected a fellow of the British Academy.[18]

Works[edit]

  • The Bard: Robert Burns, A Biography. 2021
  • Young Eliot: A Biography. 2015
  • "HONEY". Qualm. October 2006.
  • Textual Non Sense, A Four-Part Trilogy. Boiler House. 2021. ISBN 978-1911343783.
  • "Eliot After the Wasteland," 2022

Poetry books[edit]

Co-authored[edit]

Edited[edit]

Anthologies[edit]

  • Susanne Ehrhardt; Paul May; Lucy Anne Watt; Robert Crawford; Sarah Maguire; Mark Ford (1989). New Chatto Poets: Number Two. Chatto & Windus.

References[edit]

  1. ^ [1], School of English, University of St Andrews.
  2. ^ Interview in Sunday Morning with Richard Holloway, BBC Radio Scotland, 10 August 2008.
  3. ^ The God/Man/World/Triangle: A Dialogue between Science and Religion, Palgrave, 1997.
  4. ^ Scottish Religious Poetry: An Anthology (editor with Meg Bateman and James McGonigal), Saint Andrew Press, 2002.
  5. ^ The Modern Poet: Poetry, Academia, and Knowledge Since the 1750s.
  6. ^ Robert Burns and Cultural Authority (editor), Edinburgh University Press, 1996.
  7. ^ "Heaven Taught Fergusson": Robert Burns's Favourite Scottish Poet, (editor), Tuckwell Press, 2002.
  8. ^ Identifying Poets: Self and Territory in Twentieth-Century Poetry, Edinburgh University Press, 1993.
  9. ^ About Edwin Morgan (editor with Hamish Whyte), Edinburgh University Press, 1990.
  10. ^ Reading Douglas Dunn (editor with David Kinloch), Edinburgh University Press, 1992.
  11. ^ Liz Lochhead's Voices (editor with Anne Varty), Edinburgh University Press, 1994.
  12. ^ Talking Verse: Interviews with Poets (editor with Henry Hart, David Kinloch, Richard Price), Verse, 1995.
  13. ^ The Savage and the City in the Work of T. S. Eliot, Clarendon Press, 1987.
  14. ^ Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science, edited by Robert Crawford, Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0-19-925812-3.
  15. ^ Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science, p. 53.
  16. ^ The Tip of My Tongue, Cape, 2003.
  17. ^ Masculinity, Cape, 1996.
  18. ^ "Professor Robert Crawford recognised for high achievement". University of St Andrews.

External links[edit]