Martin Carter

Martin Wylde Carter
Born (1927-06-07)June 7, 1927
Georgetown, Guyana
Died 13 December 1997 (1997-12-14) (aged 70)
Georgetown, Guyana
Occupation Poet, political activist
Nationality Guyanese
Notable works Poems of Resistance from British Guiana (1954), Poems of Affinity (1980)
Notable awards 1994 Order of Roraima
Spouse Phyllis Carter (neé Howard)

Martin Wylde Carter (7 June 1927 – 13 December 1997) was a Guyanese poet and political activist. Widely regarded as the greatest Guyanese poet, and one of the most important poets of the Caribbean region, Carter is best known for his poems of protest, resistance and revolution.[1][2][3][4] Carter played an active role in Guyanese politics, particularly in the years leading up Independence in 1966 and those following immediately after. He was famously imprisoned by the British government in Guyana (then British Guiana) in October 1953 under allegations of "spreading dissension", and again in June 1954 for taking part in a PPP procession.[5][6] Shortly after being released from prison the first time, Carter published his most well-known poetry collection, Poems of Resistance from British Guiana (1954).[7][8]

Life

Martin Carter was born in Georgetown in what was then British Guiana (now Guyana) to Victor Emmanuel and Violet Eugene Carter (neé Wylde) on 7 June 1927.[9] He was one of six siblings. From 1938 to 1947 he attended Queen's College school, in Georgetown.[10] On leaving Queen's College, Carter decided not to go to university and, instead, joined the civil service where he worked for the Post Office and then for the Prison Service.[11][12] 1948 saw the first publication of Carter's poetry, when a "fragment" of his poem "An Ode to Midnight" was printed in A. J. Seymour's literary journal Kyk-Over-Al.[13] In 1950 Carter became one of the founding members of the socialist and anti-colonial People's Progressive Party (PPP), led by Cheddi Jagan.[9] [14] He published his second poem, "The Indian Woman", in the same year, in the PPP journal Thunder (under the pseudonym M. Black).[15] Carter married Phyllis Howard in 1953, and their first child, Keith, was born later that year. [16]

In 1953, Carter left the civil service and stood for the PPP in the first universal suffrage elections in British Guiana.[8] He was not elected, but the PPP won a convincing victory. In October 1953, following the British government's declaration of a State of Emergency in Guyana, Carter was arrested and detained without charge at a US airbase in Timehri on suspicion that he was "spreading dissension", along with Eusi Kwayana and Cheddi Jagan.[17][18][19] While detained, Carter took part in a one-month hunger strike, beginning on 23 November, organised by the detainees as a protest against the injustices of the government and their being held, indefinitely, without charge.[20] Carter remained in prison until January 1954, when he was released under orders not to leave Georgetown.[21] The restriction orders placed upon him lasted until 1957. In May 1954, Poems of Resistance from British Guiana was published in London by the Marxist publishing house Lawrence and Wishart, making Carter one of the first Caribbean poets to be published outside of the Caribbean.[22][21] In June 1954 he was arrested once again for taking part in a PPP procession, and was imprisoned for six months, until December that year. [21] His second child, Sonia, was born shortly after his release.[9]

When disagreement in the PPP led to a split in the party and the founding of a rival party, the People's National Congress (PNC) (under Forbes Burnham) in 1955, Carter chose to remain with the PPP. [21] This would not last long however - just a year later, in 1956, he was expelled from the PPP for being an "ultra-leftist". [21][23] After leaving the PPP, Carter worked for a brief period as an Information Officer in the British Council's Georgetown Office, and then for a longer period (1959–67) as an Information Officer for Booker (a multinational company and owner of Guyana's sugar estates).[23] Following the declaration of Guyana's Independence in May 1966, Carter resigned from Booker and joined the PNC as Minister of Information and Culture in 1967.[24] In 1966–67 he represented Guyana at the United Nations.[7] Concerned about the way in which the PNC government was developing, Carter resigned from this position - and indeed from governmental politics - in November 1970, remarking that he wished to live "simply as a poet, remaining with the people".[25] From 1970 to 1978 he returned to Booker once again, resigning for the last time in 1978 to become a Lecturer in Creative writing and Artist in Residence at the University of Guyana.[26] During this time he wrote Poems of Succession which was published in 1977 by New Beacon Books. In 1978 Carter was badly beaten when he took part in a demonstration against the PNC and their refusal to hold elections.[23] Politically, Carter's sympathy lay with the Working People's Alliance of Eusi Kwayana and Walter Rodney during this time, although he never became a party-member.[14]

In 1992 Carter took part in a Guyanese Writers Tour, in the UK, with Wilson Harris, Fred D'Aguiar and Grace Nichols.[27][1] In 1993 Carter suffered a stroke and lost the ability to walk and talk.[27] He died on 13 December 1997, survived by his wife and their four children. He was buried at the Place of Heroes in the Botanical Gardens in Georgetown, an honour that had previously been reserved for Heads of State.[28]

Poetry and critical reception

His collection Poems of Resistance, published in 1954, established his reputation as a powerful moral and political voice.

Long seen as primarily a poet who touched on themes of politics, resistance, and protest, his later poems were often highly personal. He is best known, however, for a powerful protest poem of the 1960s, "I come from the nigger yard of yesterday".[29]

At the Live from Lincoln Center jazz concert for the victims of Hurricane Katrina, Danny Glover quoted some lines of Carter's, bringing him to public attention in North America for the first time in the twenty-first century.[30]

Select bibliography

Awards

References

Notes

Sources

Further reading

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