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OBJECT OF THE WEEK: ANTHONY BURGESS'S HOROSCOPE Object of the Week. Tarot. The Waste Land. Anthony Burgess was fascinated by the possibility of predicting the future. Introduced to the mysteries of the Tarot through studying T.S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land while at school, he later designed his own Tarot decks with his first wife Lynne and practised cartomancy himself, giving readingsat
REMEMBERING KEVIN JACKSON, 1955-2021 Kevin Jackson, who died on 10 May aged 66, was a man who distinguished himself in many areas of creativity. Among other accomplishments, he was a writer, broadcaster, film director, poet, songwriter, and anthologist. His knowledge and enthusiasms were large and contained multitudes. He was also a gifted raconteur and a master of the art THE MUSIC OF ANTHONY BURGESS: SONATA FOR VIOLONCELLO AND Sonata for Violoncello and Piano in context. This sonata is dated 1945 and was written during Burgess’s time in the Army Education Corps. While training in England in the early part of the war he acted as musical director of a six-piece dance band, arranging popular songs and jazz standards and amusing himself by ‘fulfilling my boyhood ambition of wanting to have written ‘L’Apres-midi THE BARD ON TAPE: DELVING INTO ANTHONY BURGESS'S The Foundation supports academic study into Anthony Burgess. In this guest blog post, PhD student Sam Jermy writes about his work on Burgess and Shakespeare, and his new research project with the Foundation. Anthony Burgess was continually interested and engaged with the writing, world and life of William Shakespeare. This creative engagement was sustained throughoutRUSSIA ARCHIVES
The Clockwork Collection: From Russia with Nadsat. 2021 marks the 50th anniversary of the first release of Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation of A Clockwork Orange, and 60 years since Anthony Burgess completed his most famous novel. To celebrate the anniversary we are launching a new online series, with a focus on A Clockwork Orange. OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965). The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. ‘This turned out not to be a good idea,’ he writes, ‘the ANTHONY BURGESS AND POETRY This online exhibition explores Anthony Burgess and poetry. Burgess is known as a novelist, and a composer, and a journalist, critic, playwright and screenwriter, and many other things besides, but he was also a poet. His first published writing was poetry, as was his last — Byrne, a novel in verse, published posthumously in 1995 — INSIDE THE ARCHIVE: VOLUNTEERING AT THE BURGESS FOUNDATION In 2020, the Burgess Foundation was on the point of launching a new archive volunteer programme. The closure of our building due to the pandemic meant that we had to suspend all on-site activities. We explored options for working remotely with volunteers and, by October, we were ready to begin a remote transcription project with THE BURGESS BOOK COLLECTION GOES ONLINE We’re thrilled to announce that a catalogue to over two thirds of our book collection is now searchable for free on Jisc Library Hub Discover.. This is the first time that a catalogue to our library has been made available online and it marks a significant step forward in terms of increasing access to our collection and developing its research and engagement potential. THE IRWELL EDITION OF THE WORKS OF ANTHONY BURGESS The International Anthony Burgess Foundation is pleased to announce the publication of The Irwell Edition of the Works of Anthony Burgess. Launched in Burgess’s centenary year, this is the first critical edition of his novels and non-fiction. Burgess originally proposed a collected edition to Hutchinson, his British publisher, in 1980, andhe indicated in a
OBJECT OF THE WEEK: ANTHONY BURGESS'S HOROSCOPE Object of the Week. Tarot. The Waste Land. Anthony Burgess was fascinated by the possibility of predicting the future. Introduced to the mysteries of the Tarot through studying T.S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land while at school, he later designed his own Tarot decks with his first wife Lynne and practised cartomancy himself, giving readingsat
REMEMBERING KEVIN JACKSON, 1955-2021 Kevin Jackson, who died on 10 May aged 66, was a man who distinguished himself in many areas of creativity. Among other accomplishments, he was a writer, broadcaster, film director, poet, songwriter, and anthologist. His knowledge and enthusiasms were large and contained multitudes. He was also a gifted raconteur and a master of the art THE MUSIC OF ANTHONY BURGESS: SONATA FOR VIOLONCELLO AND Sonata for Violoncello and Piano in context. This sonata is dated 1945 and was written during Burgess’s time in the Army Education Corps. While training in England in the early part of the war he acted as musical director of a six-piece dance band, arranging popular songs and jazz standards and amusing himself by ‘fulfilling my boyhood ambition of wanting to have written ‘L’Apres-midi THE BARD ON TAPE: DELVING INTO ANTHONY BURGESS'S The Foundation supports academic study into Anthony Burgess. In this guest blog post, PhD student Sam Jermy writes about his work on Burgess and Shakespeare, and his new research project with the Foundation. Anthony Burgess was continually interested and engaged with the writing, world and life of William Shakespeare. This creative engagement was sustained throughoutRUSSIA ARCHIVES
The Clockwork Collection: From Russia with Nadsat. 2021 marks the 50th anniversary of the first release of Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation of A Clockwork Orange, and 60 years since Anthony Burgess completed his most famous novel. To celebrate the anniversary we are launching a new online series, with a focus on A Clockwork Orange. OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965). The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. ‘This turned out not to be a good idea,’ he writes, ‘the OBJECT OF THE WEEK: ANTHONY BURGESS'S HOROSCOPE Anthony Burgess was fascinated by the possibility of predicting the future. Introduced to the mysteries of the Tarot through studying T.S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land while at school, he later designed his own Tarot decks with his first wife Lynne and practised cartomancy himself, giving readings at a village fete in Adderbury, Oxfordshire in the 1950s, wearing a false beard and billing OBJECT OF THE WEEK: BURGESS IN THE CLASSROOM These pictures, dating from between 1955 and 1957, have recently been discovered in the Burgess Foundation’s archive. They show Burgess in front of his class at the Malayan Teachers’ Training College in Kota Bharu. The blackboard behind him shows that he is teaching phonetics. Remembering his time in Malaysia, Burgess writes, ‘I taughtpotential teachers
ANTHONY BURGESS COLLECTIONS AROUND THE WORLD Anthony Burgess Centre, University of Angers, France. The Centre was established in 1998 by Ben Forkner when Liana Burgess donated a collection of books, photographs, literary manuscripts and music to Angers University Library. The collection originated in Burgess’s homes in Callian (in the Var region of France) and Lija in Malta.VOLUNTEER WITH US
Volunteer with us. Our volunteer programme works with our unique object collection, consisting of typewriters, ornaments, and other collectables that belonged to Anthony Burgess and his family. Currently an under-explored part of the archive, the object collection is rich and varied and provides an intimate insight into Burgess’sdomestic life.
THE BARD ON TAPE: DELVING INTO ANTHONY BURGESS'S The Foundation supports academic study into Anthony Burgess. In this guest blog post, PhD student Sam Jermy writes about his work on Burgess and Shakespeare, and his new research project with the Foundation. Anthony Burgess was continually interested and engaged with the writing, world and life of William Shakespeare. This creative engagement was sustained throughout INSIDE THE ARCHIVE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM ANTHONY BURGESS'S Signing and reading for Mozart and the Wolfgang (Waterstones, Manchester, 1991). Mozart and the Wolfgang was published in 1991 and is one of a number of Burgess’s novels based around music. The novel imagines the life and world of Mozart and features fictitious conversations between composers including Prokofiev, Gershwin, Mendelssohn and Wagner. INSIDE THE ARCHIVE: ANTHONY BURGESS'S VINYL COLLECTION We take a closer look – and listen – to Anthony Burgess record collection held at the International Anthony Burgess Foundation The vinyl collection at the Burgess Foundation contains a huge variety of records all owned and collected by Anthony Burgess and his family. This important resource tells us much about Burgess’s listeninghabits, and
BURGESS AND D.H. LAWRENCE The same might be said of D.H. Lawrence, who grew up in a coal-mining community in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, before finding his way out through literature. Burgess’s sympathy with D.H. Lawrence comes into focus in Flame into Being: The Life and Work of D.H. Lawrence (1985). He makes his affinities with Lawrence clear at the outset: ‘As the OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965).The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. EPISODE NINE: BURGESS IN MALAYA Episode Two: Burgess and Shakespeare. Episode Three: One Hand Clapping & Tremor of Intent. Episode Four: Anthony Burgess & His World. Episode Five: A Clockwork Orange. Episode Six: Burgess and Keats. Episode Seven: Belli's Bible for Blasphemers. Episode Eight: Nothing Like the Sun Revisited. Episode Nine: Burgess in Malaya. THE INTERNATIONAL ANTHONY BURGESS FOUNDATIONABOUT ANTHONY BURGESSFURTHER READINGABOUT THE FOUNDATIONANTHONY BURGESSARCHIVEWHAT'S ON
The International Anthony Burgess Foundation. The International Anthony Burgess Foundation is an educational charity which encourages public and scholarly interest in the life and work of Anthony Burgess.Browse to find out about our international programme of publications, research projects, public events and activities.ANTHONY BURGESS
Anthony Burgess: John Burgess Wilson was born in Harpurhey, Manchester, on Sunday 25 February 1917. His mother, Elizabeth Burgess, was a singer and dancer on the music-hall stage in Glasgow and Manchester. His father, Joseph Wilson, played the piano in music halls and worked as a door-to-door encyclopaedia salesman before joining theArmy Pay
BURGESS ARCHIVE
Welcome to the Anthony Burgess archive The archive of Anthony and Liana Burgess stands at the heart of the Burgess Foundation’s educational work. The archive is an extensive and varied collection of items including books, audio cassette recordings, furniture, artworks, VHS and Super 8 films, typewriters, manuscripts, notebooks, letters, objects and smoking paraphernalia. Some of INSIDE THE ARCHIVE: VOLUNTEERING AT THE BURGESS FOUNDATION In 2020, the Burgess Foundation was on the point of launching a new archive volunteer programme. The closure of our building due to the pandemic meant that we had to suspend all on-site activities. We explored options for working remotely with volunteers and, by October, we were ready to begin a remote transcription project with THE BURGESS BOOK COLLECTION GOES ONLINE We’re thrilled to announce that a catalogue to over two thirds of our book collection is now searchable for free on Jisc Library Hub Discover.. This is the first time that a catalogue to our library has been made available online and it marks a significant step forward in terms of increasing access to our collection and developing its research and engagement potential. REMEMBERING KEVIN JACKSON, 1955-2021 Kevin Jackson, who died on 10 May aged 66, was a man who distinguished himself in many areas of creativity. Among other accomplishments, he was a writer, broadcaster, film director, poet, songwriter, and anthologist. His knowledge and enthusiasms were large and contained multitudes. He was also a gifted raconteur and a master of the artVOLUNTEER WITH US
Volunteer with us. Our volunteer programme works with our unique object collection, consisting of typewriters, ornaments, and other collectables that belonged to Anthony Burgess and his family. Currently an under-explored part of the archive, the object collection is rich and varied and provides an intimate insight into Burgess’sdomestic life.
OBJECT OF THE WEEK: ANTHONY BURGESS'S HOROSCOPE Object of the Week. Tarot. The Waste Land. Anthony Burgess was fascinated by the possibility of predicting the future. Introduced to the mysteries of the Tarot through studying T.S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land while at school, he later designed his own Tarot decks with his first wife Lynne and practised cartomancy himself, giving readingsat
THE MUSIC OF ANTHONY BURGESS: SONATA FOR VIOLONCELLO AND Sonata for Violoncello and Piano in context. This sonata is dated 1945 and was written during Burgess’s time in the Army Education Corps. While training in England in the early part of the war he acted as musical director of a six-piece dance band, arranging popular songs and jazz standards and amusing himself by ‘fulfilling my boyhood ambition of wanting to have written ‘L’Apres-midi OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965). The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. ‘This turned out not to be a good idea,’ he writes, ‘the THE INTERNATIONAL ANTHONY BURGESS FOUNDATIONABOUT ANTHONY BURGESSFURTHER READINGABOUT THE FOUNDATIONANTHONY BURGESSARCHIVEWHAT'S ON
The International Anthony Burgess Foundation. The International Anthony Burgess Foundation is an educational charity which encourages public and scholarly interest in the life and work of Anthony Burgess.Browse to find out about our international programme of publications, research projects, public events and activities.ANTHONY BURGESS
Anthony Burgess: John Burgess Wilson was born in Harpurhey, Manchester, on Sunday 25 February 1917. His mother, Elizabeth Burgess, was a singer and dancer on the music-hall stage in Glasgow and Manchester. His father, Joseph Wilson, played the piano in music halls and worked as a door-to-door encyclopaedia salesman before joining theArmy Pay
BURGESS ARCHIVE
Welcome to the Anthony Burgess archive The archive of Anthony and Liana Burgess stands at the heart of the Burgess Foundation’s educational work. The archive is an extensive and varied collection of items including books, audio cassette recordings, furniture, artworks, VHS and Super 8 films, typewriters, manuscripts, notebooks, letters, objects and smoking paraphernalia. Some of INSIDE THE ARCHIVE: VOLUNTEERING AT THE BURGESS FOUNDATION In 2020, the Burgess Foundation was on the point of launching a new archive volunteer programme. The closure of our building due to the pandemic meant that we had to suspend all on-site activities. We explored options for working remotely with volunteers and, by October, we were ready to begin a remote transcription project with THE BURGESS BOOK COLLECTION GOES ONLINE We’re thrilled to announce that a catalogue to over two thirds of our book collection is now searchable for free on Jisc Library Hub Discover.. This is the first time that a catalogue to our library has been made available online and it marks a significant step forward in terms of increasing access to our collection and developing its research and engagement potential. REMEMBERING KEVIN JACKSON, 1955-2021 Kevin Jackson, who died on 10 May aged 66, was a man who distinguished himself in many areas of creativity. Among other accomplishments, he was a writer, broadcaster, film director, poet, songwriter, and anthologist. His knowledge and enthusiasms were large and contained multitudes. He was also a gifted raconteur and a master of the artVOLUNTEER WITH US
Volunteer with us. Our volunteer programme works with our unique object collection, consisting of typewriters, ornaments, and other collectables that belonged to Anthony Burgess and his family. Currently an under-explored part of the archive, the object collection is rich and varied and provides an intimate insight into Burgess’sdomestic life.
OBJECT OF THE WEEK: ANTHONY BURGESS'S HOROSCOPE Object of the Week. Tarot. The Waste Land. Anthony Burgess was fascinated by the possibility of predicting the future. Introduced to the mysteries of the Tarot through studying T.S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land while at school, he later designed his own Tarot decks with his first wife Lynne and practised cartomancy himself, giving readingsat
THE MUSIC OF ANTHONY BURGESS: SONATA FOR VIOLONCELLO AND Sonata for Violoncello and Piano in context. This sonata is dated 1945 and was written during Burgess’s time in the Army Education Corps. While training in England in the early part of the war he acted as musical director of a six-piece dance band, arranging popular songs and jazz standards and amusing himself by ‘fulfilling my boyhood ambition of wanting to have written ‘L’Apres-midi OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965). The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. ‘This turned out not to be a good idea,’ he writes, ‘theBURGESS ARCHIVE
Welcome to the Anthony Burgess archive The archive of Anthony and Liana Burgess stands at the heart of the Burgess Foundation’s educational work. The archive is an extensive and varied collection of items including books, audio cassette recordings, furniture, artworks, VHS and Super 8 films, typewriters, manuscripts, notebooks, letters, objects and smoking paraphernalia. Some ofVOLUNTEER WITH US
Volunteer with us. Our volunteer programme works with our unique object collection, consisting of typewriters, ornaments, and other collectables that belonged to Anthony Burgess and his family. Currently an under-explored part of the archive, the object collection is rich and varied and provides an intimate insight into Burgess’sdomestic life.
A CLOCKWORK ORANGE ON STAGE A Clockwork Orange on Stage: After the publication of A Clockwork Orange in 1962, it did not take long for the dramatic possibilities of Burgess’s novel to be explored.. The first partial adaptation of A Clockwork Orange took place on BBC television. Burgess discussed his work with the writer Kenneth Allsop on the Tonight programme on 17 May 1962, three days after the novel had been BURGESS PREDICTS LIFE IN 2020 The 1984 essay was not the first time that Burgess had written speculatively about the future. His novel The Wanting Seed (1962) imagines a dystopian future in which human burial has been replaced by an eco-friendly system of composting. Couples are limited to a maximum of one child to control the population levels, and fake wars are organised by governments to ensure that orchestrated ANTHONY BURGESS MEMORIES PROJECT Anthony Burgess Memories Project: One of the central activities of the 2017 centenary year is our Anthony Burgess Memories Project which brings together reminiscences of Burgess by people who encountered him in one context or another, and assessments of his work from notable writers, artists, musicians and academics. This is the first time that Burgess’s legacy has been considered from NOTHING LIKE THE SUN othing Like The Sun: A Story of Shakespeare’s Love-Life was published in 1964 to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth. Beginning with Shakespeare’s early life, the novel follows Will as he grows up both romantically and artistically. Written in a version of Elizabethan English, it is wildly inventive, full of bawdy humour and references OBJECT OF THE WEEK: BURGESS IN THE CLASSROOM These pictures, dating from between 1955 and 1957, have recently been discovered in the Burgess Foundation’s archive. They show Burgess in front of his class at the Malayan Teachers’ Training College in Kota Bharu. The blackboard behind him shows that he is teaching phonetics. Remembering his time in Malaysia, Burgess writes, ‘I taughtpotential teachers
EDITING BEARD'S ROMAN WOMEN Beard’s Roman Women is an odd book. The title, changed by the American publisher from Rome in the Rain, seems to suggest a historical novel, set in the Roman Empire. The text is partnered with strange photographs of ghostly Roman monuments, reflected in puddles and in glass. The story is clearly autobiographical yet is told OBJECT OF THE WEEK: THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF EDWARD PAGRAM Edward Pagram (1927-2007) illustrated two of Burgess’s novels: The Eve of St Venus (1964) and A Vision of Battlements (1965).The charcoal illustrations, some of which are included here, show the humorous side to Burgess’s novels, but Burgess had his doubts about them. ONE HAND CLAPPING: A RESOURCE FOR READING GROUPS One Hand Clapping in brief One Hand Clapping is the story of Janet and Howard Shirley, living a dreary life in the dreary fictional northern city of Bradcaster.Howard works at the local garage and Janet works in the local supermarket, and they spend their evenings having dinner in front of the television.* Menu
WHAT’S IT GOING TO BE THEN, EH? About Anthony Burgess* Anthony Burgess
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CONCERT: SONO ENSEMBLE – SOUTHERN RHYTHMS Fri 18 Jun 2021 7:00 pm £15.00 More information * The International Anthony Burgess Foundation*
WHAT'S IT GOING TO BE THEN, EH? Exhibitions. New writing. Concert commissions. Academic research. Public events, in venues and online. And at the core of everything, preserving and promoting our extensive Anthony Burgess archive. Your donation to the Burgess Foundation supports our mission to promote the life and work of Anthony Burgess in so many ways.DONATE
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