Talk:Owen Marshall

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Untitled[edit]

I have un-done the edit that removed the two sentences about the status of Owen Marshall's work in New Zealand literature. (ie, as being ranked up there with Sargeson and Frame). These were removed as "unsourced POV statements". While it is true that the statement is unsourced, in my experience as a teacher of English and Creative Writing, I would say it is also a very fair and accurate description of the reputation that Marshall has in the literary community in New Zealand. I see that this statement has survived a number of past edits with no adverse comment in the talk page. I agree that the statement ought to be attributed, but I cannot immediately find an attribution. I suggest the best way to deal with this is simply to add "attribution needed" to the statement. Particularly since the article is a stub, this might be a good way to both acknowledge the need for attribution without unnecessarily shortening the article. Boxter1977 (talk) 03:36, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I am very open to the view that since the passing of Janet Frame, Marshall is New Zealand's greatest living creative writer. But I wish someone would find a reputable quote to that effect.132.181.160.42 (talk) 09:23, 5 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Marshall speaks about himself[edit]

I invite others to incorporate into this entry bits of the following statement, taken from the web page of the Department of English at the University of Canterbury.

"Most of my life has been spent in the South Island towns of Blenheim, Oamaru and Timaru, although I was born in Te Kuiti in 1941. I grew up part of a family in which the world of literature and that of physical experience were equally valued. My father, a Methodist minister, passed on to me a love of books and an enthusiasm for nature, particularly through walking and camping.

"After graduating MA (Hons) in History from the University of Canterbury, I became a full-time secondary teacher, mainly at Craighead Diocesan School, Timaru, and Waitaki Boys' High School, Oamaru. In 1985 I resigned from Waitaki as Acting Rector in order to have more time for my fiction, and in the nineties most of my time has been given to writing, although I also tutor at Aoraki Polytechnic in Timaru.

"Ten books of mine have been published, most recently a novel, Harlequin Rex, and a collection of my best short stories. I have also edited three anthologies of New Zealand writing.

"I live in Timaru with my wife, Jackie, and we have two daughters, Andrea and Belinda. Jackie and I have links with farming families in New Zealand going back to the 1840s, and feel very much at home with the landscape around us. I feel no particular attraction towards city life, and the term regionalist is one that I'm happy to apply to myself. The downlands of South Canterbury and North Otago are very familiar, and I enjoy the sometimes bleak grandeur of the Mackenzie Country and Central Otago.

"Among friendships important to me are those with Brian Turner and Grahame Sydney, with whom I have a fellowship of attitude as well as a common South Island context. It was through Brian that I came to know Grahame, and for a good many years now I have had the privilege not only of seeing some of his paintings taking shape, but in being aware of the life and the intelligence from which they arise. There is a wonderful lack of deceit in his work, and a wonderful presence of landscape on its own terms. The three of us collaborated to produce Timeless Land, our 1995 tribute to Otago.

"Despite the visual and naturalistic elements sometimes remarked on in my writing, I'm more an impressionist that a strict realist, and the psychological landscapes of my fellow New Zealanders are my fundamental concern. My interest is in mood and character more than plot and action, and a search to capture the fragrance of experience, rather than experience itself. What I look for in all arts, is some insight into the business of living."132.181.160.42 (talk) 09:23, 5 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]