John Barrington Wain

Name Entries

Information

person

Name Entries *

John Barrington Wain

Computed Name Heading

Name Components

Name :

John Barrington Wain

Wain, John Barrington

Computed Name Heading

Name Components

Name :

Wain, John Barrington

Wain, John Barrington, 1925-, CBE, author

Computed Name Heading

Name Components

Name :

Wain, John Barrington, 1925-, CBE, author

Genders

Exist Dates

Exist Dates - Date Range

1925

1925

Birth

Show Fuzzy Range Fields

Biographical History

The author John Barrington Wain, 1925-1994, was Professor of Poetry at University of Oxford, 1973-78. He was born in Stoke-on-Trent and educated at the High School, Newcastle-under-Lyme, and then St John's College, Oxford, where he became Fereday Fellow, 1946-49. He was a Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Reading, 1947-55, and on resignation became a freelance author and critic. Like contemporary figures, Kingsley Amis, Philip Larkin, and John Braine, Wain began publishing just as Britain was recovering from the Second World War. It was a time when writers were reacting against the orthodoxies of modernism. Wain was one of the Angry Young Men. His fictional works included Hurry on down (1953); Living in the present (1955); The contenders (1958); A travelling woman (1959); Nuncle and other stories (1960); Strike the father dead (1962); The young visitors (1965); Death of the hind legs and other stories (1966); The smaller sky (1967); A winter in the hills (1970); The Life Guard and other stories (1971); The pardoner's tale (1978); Lizzie's floating shop (1981); Young shoulders (1982); Where the rivers meet (1988); Comedies (1990); Johnson is leaving: a monodrama (1994); and, Hungry generations (1994). In addition he wrote poetry and plays and also did much work as an editor, critic, biographer, anthologist, reviewer and broadcaster. The literary manuscripts of John Barrington Wain were deposited in 1974, and subsequently added to by the author until 1986, when the whole deposit was purchased by the Library with the help of the Local Museums Purchase Fund. These manuscripts constitute MSS 2851-2874. Some items were deposited after 1985 and these, along with the manuscripts in the possession of the author at his death were purchased in 1996, with the aid of the National Fund for Acquisitions. These manuscripts constitute MSS 3124-3137. Further manuscripts were found by his family subsequently and were gifted in December 1997. The manuscript of his first novel, Hurry on Down (1953), has not survived, but notebooks, manuscripts and typescripts of most of his later novels, short stories, poetry, plays and criticism are present.

From the guide to the John Wain Archive, 1947-1994, (Edinburgh University Library)

John [Barrington] Wain (1925–1994) was a British poet, who studied at St John's College, Oxford, where his principal tutor was C. S. Lewis. Bernard Richards writes that Wain "associated with the Movement, a group of nine poets (never a tightly constituted group), published in D. J. Enright's collection Poets of the 1950s (1955) and Robert Conquest's anthology New Lines (1956). The Movement poems were sceptical, middle-brow, ironical, common-sensical, and suspicious of Romantic excess, in reaction to the obscurity and posturing of the surrealists and the apocalyptic poets" ( ODNB ). Although Wain temporarily gave up university teaching in 1955, he continued lecturing at universities. During the 1970's, he held the post of fellow in creative arts at Brasenose College Oxford (1971-2) and professor of poetry at Oxford (1973). He was made honorary fellow at St. John's College, Oxford, in 1985.

Henry Pettit was Professor of English at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He was named Honorary Curator of Rare Books in Norlin Library in the early 1950's, managing the collections and encouraging the acquisition of such materials as eighteenth-century English literature and examples of early printing. Pettit was a scholar of the English poet Edward Young (1683-1765), compiling A Bibliography of Young's Night Thoughts (1954) and editing The Correspondence of Edward Young (1971).

Paul Carter was Professor of English at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Beginning in 1953, Carter served as editor for the Colorado Quarterly, a journal published by the university, which covered a number of topics, including internationals affairs, the sciences, literature, and the arts.

From the guide to the John Wain Letters to Mr. Pettit and Mr. Carter, 1959, (University of Colorado at Boulder Libraries. Special Collections Dept.)

Of Rhosgadfan, Caernarvon.

Epithet: CBE, author

British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000560.0x00023e

eng

Latn

External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/211679404

Other Entity IDs (Same As)

Sources

Loading ...

Resource Relations

Loading ...

Internal CPF Relations

Loading ...

Languages Used

Subjects

English literature Criticism, Textual

Nationalities

Activities

Occupations

Legal Statuses

Places

Convention Declarations

<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

General Contexts

Structure or Genealogies

Mandates

Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

w6p08wmw

64577318