Kevin Jackson (writer)

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Kevin Jackson
Born (1955-01-03) 3 January 1955
London, England
Occupation Writer
Nationality British
Period 1979–2012
Genres Criticism, biography, cultural history
Notable work(s) The Language of Cinema (1998)
Humphrey Jennings (2004)
Withnail & I (BFI Modern Classics) (2008)
Invisible Forms: A Guide to Literary Curiosities (2000)

Kevin Jackson is an English writer, broadcaster, filmmaker and pataphysician.

He was born in London on 3 January 1955 and educated at the Emanuel School,[1] Battersea, and Pembroke College, Cambridge. After teaching in the English Department of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, he joined the BBC, first as a producer in radio and then as a director of short documentaries for television. In 1987 he was recruited to the Arts pages of The Independent.[2] He has been a freelance writer since the early 1990s[3] and is now a regular contributor to BBC radio programmes,[4] including Radio 4's Saturday Review.[5]

Jackson often collaborates on projects in various media: with, among others, the film-maker Kevin Macdonald, with whom he co-produced a Channel 4 documentary on Humphrey Jennings, The Man Who Listened to Britain (2000); with the cartoonist Hunt Emerson, on comic strips about the history of Western occultism for Fortean Times, on two comics inspired by John Ruskin (published by the Ruskin Foundation)[6] and on a book-length version of Dante's Inferno (Knockabout Books, 2102); with the musician and composer Colin Minchin (lyrics for various songs, and the rock opera Bite, first staged in West London, October 2011); and with the songwriter Peter Blegvad (short surreal plays for BBC Radio 3eartoons). Jackson also conducted a long biographical interview with Blegvad, published by Atlas Press in September 2011 as The Bleaching Stream.[7] Jackson appears, under his own name, as a semi-fictional character in Iain Sinclair's account of a pedestrian journey around the M25, London Orbital.[8] Worple Press published Jackson's book of interviews with Sinclair, The Verbals in 2002.[9]

He was among the founder members of the London Institute of 'Pataphysics,[10] and holds the Ordre de la Grande Gidouille from the College de Pataphysique in Paris. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a Companion of the Guild of St George. From 2009–2011 he was Visiting Professor in English at University College, London.

Select bibliography

As Author

As editor

As co-editor

  • Pataphysics: Definitions and Citations. (with Alastair Brotchie, Stanley Chapman and Thieri Foulc), 2003 (ISBN 1-900565-08-0)

Filmography

Shorts

  • Bite: Diary of a Vampire Housewife, 2009
  • Bite: Pavane for a Vampire Queen, 2011
  • No More a-Roving (Vampire Mix), 2011
  • Exquisite Corpse (from the novel by Robert Irwin), 2011
  • The Last of the Vostyachs (from the novel by Diego Marani), 2012
  • Constellation of Genius, 2012

References

  1. List_of_Old_Emanuels#Literature
  2. "Carcanet Press Author Biography". Retrieved 10 October 2012. 
  3. Sinclair, Iain. London Orbital. pp. 204–205. 
  4. "TV & Radio Sites". BBC. Retrieved 10 October 2012. 
  5. "Saturday Review Programmes". Retrieved 10 October 2012. 
  6. "Comic book highlights Ruskinian views". London: The Independent. 29 November 2005. 
  7. The Journal of the London Institute of 'Pataphysics. Retrieved 10 October 2012. 
  8. Nicholas Lezard (21 September 2002). "Meandering round the M25". The Guardian. 
  9. "The Verbals: Iain Sinclair in conversation with Kevin Jackson". Retrieved 10 October 2012. 
  10. Interview with Kevin Jackson at Ready, Steady, Book

Reviews

  • Self, Will (19 October 2012). "Constellation of Genius, 1922: Modernism Year One by Kevin Jackson – review". Guardian. 
  • Laity, Paul (3 March 2005). "Humphrey Jennings". London Review of Books 27 (5): 18–20. 
  • Blincoe, Nicholas (11 April 2004). "Letters of Introduction". Daily Telegraph. 
  • Mullan, John (11 April 2004). "Letters of Introduction". Guardian. 
  • French, Philip (20 January 2008). "Lawrence of Arabia". Observer. 
  • Carrier, Dan (28 January 2010). "The Worlds of John Ruskin". Camden New Journal. 
  • O'Brien, Murray (22 February 2009). "Moose". Independent on Sunday. 
  • Lacey, Josh (28 March 2009). "Moose". Guardian. 
  • Preston, John (21 October 2009). "Bite". Spectator. 
  • Hirst, Christopher (29 October 2009). "Bite". Independent. 
  • Poole, Stephen (27 March 2004). "Bite". Guardian. 
  • Biswell, Andrew (25 January 2003). "Bite". Guardian. 

External links

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