George Blake (1893–1961) was a Scottish journalist, literary editor and novelist. His The Shipbuilders (1935) is considered a significant and influential effort to write about the Scottish industrial working class.[1][2] "At a time when the idea of myth was current in the Scottish literary world and other writers were forging theirs out of the facts and spirit of rural life, Blake took the iron and grease and the pride of the skilled worker to create one for industrial Scotland."[3] As a literary critic, he wrote a noted work against the Kailyard school of Scottish fiction; and is taken to have formulated a broad-based thesis as cultural critic of the "kailyard" representing the "same ongoing movement in Scottish culture" that leads to "a cheapening, evasive, stereotyped view of Scottish life."[4] He was well known as a BBC radio broadcaster by the 1930s.
The Porpoise Press, in existence from 1922 to 1939, was founded in Edinburgh by Roderick Watson Kerr and George Malcolm Thomson.[12] Blake had contact with Thomson from 1923, when the Press published his one-act play The Mother.[13] Thomson's 1927 book Caledonia broached the "condition of Scotland" question that preoccupied Blake and other Scottish intellectuals into the 1930s.[14]
Late in 1929, Blake was introduced to Geoffrey Faber, by Frank Vigor Morley.[15] He became in 1930 a director of Faber & Faber, playing a role in the Porpoise Press: Faber & Faber effectively took it over, through interest in Scottish national literature.[1][16]Morning Tide (1931), a novel by Neil Gunn, was an immediate commercial success for the Press.[17]
At this point Thomson and Blake were aligned in nationalist politics. Thomson's 1931 pamphlet The Kingdom of Scotland Restored, advocating a form of Scottish home rule, had Blake's approval, and the Introduction was signed by Blake, Andrew Dewar Gibb, Moray McLaren and William Power.[18] By that year, Blake had joined the National Party of Scotland (NPS).[19] Gunn became involved in the efforts, which succeeded, to merge the NPS, of the left, with the conservative Scottish Party; on Thomson's account, Blake encouraged Gunn to do so.[20]
Returning to Scotland in 1932, Blake worked for the Porpoise Press, which in 1934 published William Power's My Scotland.[1][21][22] Both Gibb and Power later became leaders of the merged Scottish National Party.
Blake and Thomson then fell out, with Thomson resigning from the Press in 1933. It published his Scotland That Distressed Area in 1935. Blake's The Shipbuilders was published the same year, by Faber & Faber. They differed in method: Thomson offered partisan polemics, Blake a journalist's realism expressed as a novel.[23]
Later life
Blake lived at The Glenan, Helensburgh and elsewhere. He was a radio broadcaster and literary journalist; and was visited by T. S. Eliot.[1][24] He had a regular position on This Week in Scotland, BBC Scottish Region Radio. This was despite some reservations on the part of Andrew Stewart, Scottish Programme Director, who thought Blake's nationalist views were too overt, and would have preferred Eric Linklater.[25]
Blake died in Glasgow's Southern General Hospital on 29 August 1961, survived by his wife Eliza Malcolm Lawson (Ellie), whom he had married in 1923.[1]
Works
Fiction
Blake's novels have been described as "resolutely realistic, serious, socialistic, and nationalistic".[26] Their social realism included addressing industrialisation and urban poverty, topics neglected in Scottish literature until the 1920s and 1930s.[27][28] He wrote a number of "Glasgow novels", as well as other fiction.[29]Hugh Macdiarmid discussed in 1926 a "new Glasgow school" of novelists, listing figures of whom only Catherine Carswell attained the same sort of stature as Blake.[30]
"Garvel" novel series; these five popular works about the Oliphant family had a television adaptation.[36][11] After Late Harvest (1938)[31] came The Valiant Heart (1940), The Constant Star (1945), The Westering Sun (1946), The Paying Guest (1949), and The Voyage Home (1952).[37]
In later life, Blake wrote factually about Clydeside, shipbuilders and shipping lines.[42][31] "Blake's thesis essentially is that the history of the Clyde is a glorious tale of great ships, born out of traditions of craftsmanship and mechanical genius
unrivalled anywhere in the world."[43]
The Heart of Scotland (1934) and later editions. In the 1951 edition Blake drew attention to industrial Central Belt locations as an antidote to received views of Scottish life.[44] He encouraged a realism in relation to Scottish life, but stopping short of the reportage of sectarianism and slums.[45]
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 256. ISBN9781908931320.
^Burch, Steven Dedalus (2008). Andrew P. Wilson and the Early Irish and Scottish National Theatres, 1911-1950. Edwin Mellen Press. p. 94. ISBN9780773450844.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 41. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 11. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 151. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 42. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. p. 158. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. pp. 42 and 51. ISBN9781908931320.
^McKechnie, George (2013). The Best-hated Man: George Malcolm Thomson, Intellectuals and the Condition of Scotland Between the Wars. Argyll Publishing. pp. 192–3. ISBN9781908931320.
^Andrew Blaikie, Legacies of Perception: The Forgotten Places of Twentieth-Century Scotland, The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies Vol. 39, No. 1, Landscapes: Places of Memory, Subversive Spaces, and Boundary Crossings (2015), pp. 64–91, at p. 74. Published by: Canadian Journal of Irish Studies JSTOR24635401