Amryl Johnson

Amryl Johnson (6 April 1944 1 February 2001) was a writer born in Trinidad who lived most of her life in Britain.[1]

Amryl Johnson
Born(1944-04-06)6 April 1944
Trinidad
Died1 February 2001(2001-02-01) (aged 56)
OccupationPoet
NationalityTrinidadian British

Life

Johnson was born in Tunapuna, Trinidad, and was brought up by her grandparents until the age of 11, when she moved to Britain to join her parents.[2][3] She attended secondary school in London and went on to study British, African and Caribbean literature at the University of Kent.[4] Much of her work concerned the diasporic nature of her life and the hostility she faced in Britain[1]. For a time, she taught at the University of Warwick but generally supported herself by writing and performing. During the late 1980s, she settled in Coventry.[1]

Sequins for a Ragged Hem (1988) narrates Johnson's second return tour to Trinidad as a spiritual "homecoming" made problematic, among other reasons, by the fact that the house where she was born had been demolished.[5]

Johnson's work was included in several anthologies, including News for Babylon: The Chatto Book of Westindian-British Poetry (1984), Let It Be Told: Essays by Black Women in Britain (1987), Watchers & Seekers: Creative Writing by Black Women in Britain (1987), Delighting the Heart (1989), Creation Fire: A CAFRA Anthology of Caribbean Women's Poetry (1990), Taking Reality by Surprise (1991), Daughters of Africa (1992) and OTHER: British and Irish Poetry since 1970 (1999).

Selected works

  • Shackles, poetry (1983)
  • Long Road to Nowhere, poetry (Virago, 1985)[6]
  • Sequins for a Ragged Hem, travel writing (Virago, 1988)[6]
  • Blood and Wine, audio recording (Cofa Press, 1991)[6]
  • Gorgons, poetry (Cofa Press, 1992)[6]
  • Tread Softly in Paradise (Cofa Press)[6]
  • Calling, poetry (2000)[6]
gollark: Number theory and eldritch elliptic curve things are valuable in cryptography. Weird graph theory stuff helps make error correcting codes.
gollark: It often turns out to be useful and applicable in some silly way even when nobody expected it to be.
gollark: It would probably be necessary to fix the thing where it sometimes teleports you into walls, and you take damage until you somehow fall out.
gollark: I like the Ender IO (Minecraft mod) staff of traveling (short-range personal teleporter), so either that or a really really good computer (for purposes).
gollark: It might be interesting to consider what the graph of the connections would look like. Depending on how far apart habitats are in the network, there could still be a lot of variation between them.

References

  1. Brown, Stuart (29 March 2001). "Obituary: Amryl Johnson". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  2. Stringer, Jenny, ed. (1996). The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Literature in English. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191727573. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  3. Busby, Margaret, "Amryl Johnson", Daughters of Africa, London: Jonathan Cape, 1992, p. 587.
  4. Dabydeen, David; Gilmore, John; Jones, Cecily, eds. (2007). The Oxford Companion to Black British History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191727337. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  5. Tobias Döring (2002). Caribbean-English Passages: Intertexuality in a Postcolonial Tradition. Psychology Press. pp. 45–6. ISBN 978-0-415-25584-4.
  6. "Obituary: Amryl Johnson". Coventry & Warwickshire Network (CWN). 13 February 2001.
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