Edward Upward
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Edward Upward | |
Born | September 9, 1903 Romford, England |
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Occupation | Novelist |
Edward Falaise Upward (born September 9, 1903) is a British novelist and short story writer.
Upward was educated at Repton School, where he became friends with Christopher Isherwood. As an undergraduate at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge he won the Chancellor's Medal for English Verse in 1924. He was part of a group of writers including Isherwood (with whom he created the surreal world of the Mortmere stories), W. H. Auden and Stephen Spender.
After graduation Upward worked in various teaching jobs, and in 1932 took up a post at Alleyn's School, Dulwich where he was to remain for nearly thirty years. He joined the Communist Party in the same year and has remained committed to internationalism and socialism, although he and his wife Hilda left the Communist Party in 1948, believing its policies in Britain were no longer revolutionary.
Upward's first novel, Journey to the Border, was published by the Hogarth Press in 1938. It describes in poetic prose the rebellion of a private tutor against his employer and the menacing world of the 1930s, moving from a nightmarish state to one where he recognizes that he must join the workers' movement.
The semi-autobiographical trilogy, The Spiral Ascent, was published in the 1960s and 70s after he had retired from teaching and moved to Sandown, Isle of Wight. It deals with a poet's life and his struggle to combine artistic creativity with political commitment, including in its historical sweep the fight against the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s, opposition to the leadership of the Communist Party in the 1940s and later on involvement in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
In the last decades of the twentieth century Upward returned to writing short stories, which have been published along with earlier works by Enitharmon Press. In 2005, Upward was awarded the Benson Medal by the Royal Society of Literature.
[edit] Works
Novels:
- Journey to the Border (1938, revised 1994)
- In the Thirties - vol. 1 of The Spiral Ascent (1962)
- The Rotten Elements - vol. 2 of The Spiral Ascent (1969)
- No Home but the Struggle - vol. 3 of The Spiral Ascent (1977)
Short story collections:
- The Railway Accident and Other Stories (1969)
- The Night Walk and Other Stories (1987)
- The Mortmere Stories (1994)
- An Unmentionable Man (1994)
- The Scenic Railway (1997)
- The Coming Day and Other Stories (2000)
- A Renegade in Springtime (2003)
Full details of works can be found in Edward Upward: A Bibliography 1920-2000, Alan Walker, Enitharmon Press (2000).
[edit] External links
- Enitharmon Press (author page)
- Guardian article August 2003
- Observer article March 2003
- The Scotsman review July 2003
- Socialist Review article October 2003
- Socialist Review review May 2003
- Camden New Journal review August 2003
- The Dulwich Society review Winter 2003
- New Humanist review June 2003