DEREK
WALCOTT
Vice President
Derek
Walcott was born in 1930 in the town of Castries in Saint
Lucia, one of the Windward Islands in the Lesser Antilles.
The experience of growing up on the isolated volcanic island,
an ex-British colony, has had a strong influence on Walcott's
life and work. Both his grandmothers were said to have
been the descendants of slaves. His father, a Bohemian
watercolourist, died when Derek and his twin brother, Roderick,
were only a few years old. His mother ran the town's Methodist
school. After studying at St. Mary's College in his native
island and at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica,
Walcott moved in 1953 to Trinidad, where he has worked
as theatre and art critic. At the age of 18, he made his
debut with 25 Poems, but his breakthrough came with the
collection of poems, In a Green Night (1962). In 1959,
he founded the Trinidad Theatre Workshop which produced
many of his early plays.
Walcott
has been an assiduous traveller to other countries but
has always, not least in his efforts to create an indigenous
drama, felt himself deeply-rooted in Caribbean society
with its cultural fusion of African, Asiatic and European
elements. For many years, he has divided his time between
Trinidad, where he has his home as a writer, and Boston
University, where he teaches literature and creative writing.

From Nobel
Lectures, Literature 1991-1995, Editor Sture Allén,
World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1997