- Source: Fleur Adcock
Fleur Adcock (10 February 1934 – 10 October 2024) was a New Zealand poet and editor. Of English and Northern Irish ancestry, Adcock lived much of her life in England. She is well-represented in New Zealand poetry anthologies, was awarded an honorary doctorate of literature from Victoria University of Wellington, and was awarded an OBE in 1996 for her contribution to New Zealand literature. In 2008 she was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature.
Early life
Adcock, the older of two sisters, was born in Papakura to Cyril John Adcock and Irene Robinson Adcock on 10 February 1934. Her birth name was Kareen Fleur Adcock, but she was known as Fleur and legally changed her name to Fleur Adcock in 1982. She spent eight years of her childhood (1939–1947) in England.
Adcock studied Classics at Victoria University of Wellington, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1954 and a Masters of Arts in 1956.
Career
Adcock worked as an assistant lecturer in classics and librarian at the University of Otago in Dunedin between 1958 and 1962, and as a librarian at the Alexander Turnbull Library in Wellington between 1962 and 1963.
In 1963, she returned to England and took up a post as a librarian at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London. She had already had poems published in a few literary journals in New Zealand at this time. Her first collection of poetry, The Eye of the Hurricane, was published in New Zealand in 1964, and in 1967 Tigers was her first collection published in Britain.
In 1975, Adcock returned briefly to New Zealand for the first time since she had left for London, and on returning to London in 1976, she became a full time writer. She was the Arts Council Creative Writing Fellow at the Charlotte Mason College of Education in Ambleside from 1977 to 1978, followed by the Northern Arts Literary Fellowship at the universities of Newcastle and Durham from 1979 to 1981.
From 1980, Adcock worked as a freelance writer, living in East Finchley, north London, a translator and poetry commentator for the BBC.
Adcock's poetry is typically concerned with themes of place, human relationships and everyday activities, but frequently with a dark twist given to the mundane events she writes about. Formerly, her early work was influenced by her training as a classicist but her later work is looser in structure and more concerned with the world of the unconscious mind. The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature (2006) notes that her poems are often written from the perspective of an outsider or express a divided sense of identity inherited from her own emigrant experience and separation from New Zealand family.
In 2006, Adcock won one of Britain's top poetry awards, the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry, for her collected works, Poems 1960–2000. She was only the seventh female poet to receive the award in its 73 years.
Personal life and death
Adcock was married to two notable New Zealand literary personalities. In August 1952, she married Alistair Te Ariki Campbell, divorcing in 1958; and in February 1962, she married Barry Crump, divorcing in 1963. She had two sons, Gregory and Andrew, both with her first husband.
Adcock's sister Marilyn Duckworth is a novelist, and their mother Irene (1908–2001) was also a writer.
Adcock died following a short illness on 10 October 2024, at the age of 90.
Poetry collections
1964: The Eye of the Hurricane, Wellington: Reed
1967: Tigers, London: Oxford University Press
1971: High Tide in the Garden, London: Oxford University Press
1974: The Scenic Route, London and New York: Oxford University Press
1979: The Inner Harbour, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press
1979: Below Loughrigg, Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books
1983: Selected Poems, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press
1986: Hotspur: a ballad, Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books ISBN 978-1-85224-001-1
1986: The Incident Book, Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press
1988: Meeting the Comet, Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books
1991: Time-zones, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press
1997: Looking Back, Oxford and Auckland: Oxford University Press
2000: Poems 1960–2000, Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books ISBN 978-1-85224-530-6
2010: Dragon Talk, Tarset: Bloodaxe Books ISBN 978-1-85224-878-9
2013: Glass Wings, Tarset: Bloodaxe Books and Wellington, NZ: Victoria University Press.
2014: The Land Ballot, Wellington, NZ: Victoria University Press, Tarset: Bloodaxe Books.
2017: Hoard, Wellington, NZ: Victoria University Press, Hexham: Bloodaxe Books.
2019: Collected Poems, Wellington, NZ: Victoria University Press.
2021: The Mermaid's Purse, Wellington, NZ: Victoria University Press, Hexham: Bloodaxe Books.
2024: Collected Poems, Hexham: Bloodaxe Books, Wellington, NZ: Te Herenga Waka University Press.
= Edited or translated
=1982: Editor, Oxford Book of Contemporary New Zealand Poetry, Auckland: Oxford University Press
1983: Translator, The Virgin and the Nightingale: Medieval Latin poems, Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books, ISBN 978-0-906427-55-2
1987: Editor, Faber Book of 20th Century Women's Poetry, London and Boston: Faber and Faber
1989: Translator, Orient Express: Poems. Grete Tartler, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press
1992: Translator, Letters from Darkness: Poems, Daniela Crasnaru, Oxford: Oxford University Press
1994: Translator and editor, Hugh Primas and the Archpoet, Cambridge, England, and New York: Cambridge University Press
1995: Editor (with Jacqueline Simms), The Oxford Book of Creatures, verse and prose anthology, Oxford: Oxford University Press
Awards and honours
1961: Festival of Wellington Poetry Award
1964: New Zealand State Literary Fund Award
1968: Buckland Award (New Zealand)
1968: Jessie Mackay Prize (New Zealand)
1972: Jessie Mackay Prize (New Zealand)
1976: Cholmondeley Award (United Kingdom)
1979: Buckland Award (New Zealand)
1984: New Zealand National Book Award for Selected Poems (1983)
1984: Elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
1988: Arts Council Writers' Award (United Kingdom)
1996: Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to literature, in the 1996 New Year Honours
2006: Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry (United Kingdom) for Poems 1960–2000
2007: Honorary Doctor of Literature from Victoria University of Wellington
2008: Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature, in the 2008 Queen's Birthday Honours
2010: Honorary Doctor of Literature from Goldsmiths, University of London
References
External links
Fleur Adcock at IMDb
Profile and analysis, Emory University
"Sonnets – Fleur Adcock". BBC Radio 4 archive. (Audio 5 mins) Friday 30 May 2003
Adcock discussing her Selected Poems with Andrew Motion. British Library recording. 14 July 1983 (1 hr, audio)
Poetry Archive profile with poems written and audio
Portrait at the National Portrait Gallery
Review by Herbert Lomas of Poems 1960–2000 by Adcock in Ambit No 161 – 2000
Interview with Adcock "Final touch" The Guardian 29 July 2000
Guardian book review of Dragon Talk 15 May 2010
Fleur Adcock discography at Discogs
Archival material at
Honorary graduates list on Victoria University of Wellington website
Fleur Adcock on her life in poetry. RNZ interview 16 February 2019
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Fleur Adcock
- Faber Book of Twentieth-Century Women's Poetry
- Barry Crump
- Fleur (given name)
- Adcock
- The Penguin Book of Contemporary British Poetry
- Alistair Te Ariki Campbell
- Deaths in October 2024
- British poetry
- Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry