Roderick Watson

Roderick Watson (born 1943) is a Scottish poet, born in Aberdeen. He is a professor emeritus in English Studies at the University of Stirling.[1]

Watson was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School, Aberdeen University and the University of Cambridge (Peterhouse), where his doctoral thesis was on the poetry of Hugh MacDiarmid. He was later to write a critical study of MacDiarmid, whom he met and befriended as a student. Watson later taught at the University of Victoria in Canada, before coming back to Scotland and joining the University of Stirling.

He has written and lectured widely on Scottish literature and cultural identity, and served as General Editor of the Canongate Classics reprint series since the start of the project in 1987. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and is currently the co-editor (with Linda Dryden) of The Journal of Stevenson Studies.

He has published two main volumes of verse over the years, and has featured in numerous periodicals and anthologies. After an early pamphlet he published his debut work True History on the Walls in 1976, and this was followed by the Luath Press publication Into the Blue Wavelengths in 2004. Upon its publication it was lauded by Philip Hobsbaum, who labelled Watson as a "poet of introspection and retrospection".

Notes

  • Watson, R (1985) MacDiarmid (The Open University Press)
  • Watson, R (1984; 2nd ed. in 2 vols 2007) The Literature of Scotland (Macmillan)
  • Watson, R (1989) The Poetry of Norman MacCaig (Association for Scottish Literary Studies)
  • Watson, R (1996) The Poetry of Scotland (Edinburgh University Press)
  • Watson, R (1964) 28 Poems with James Rankin (Aberdeen)
  • Watson, R (1970) Roderick Watson, (Parklands Poets, Preston)
  • Watson, R (1971) Trio, with Val Simmons and Paul Mills, (New Rivers Press, New York)
  • Watson, R (1976) True History on the Walls (Macdonald, Edinburgh)
  • Watson, R (2004) Into the Blue Wavelengths(Luath Press, Edinburgh)

References

  1. "Gathering To Mark Poet's Birthday". The Glasgow Herald. 27 May 1972. p. 2. Retrieved 10 May 2012.


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