New Zealand Writers

photo of Alan Riach

Cover of the Oxford Companion to NZ Literature
cover of First ∓mp; Last Songs
cover of Clearances
Cover of Representing Scotland in Literature, Popular Culture and Iconography

RIACH, Alan

The poems range in tone from lyric sweetness to wry sarcasm.

Author entry from The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (1998). About the Companion entries View list of Companion contributors

RIACH, Alan (1957– ), was born in Lanarkshire in *Scotland, and has devoted his writing life to making the literature of his homeland more widely known.

He took a BA at Cambridge University and his doctorate in the Department of Scottish Studies of Glasgow University. His dissertation formed the basis for his monograph Hugh MacDiarmid’s Epic Poetry (1991), which aims to reclaim MacDiarmid as an unjustly neglected poet, especially celebrating his contribution to the renaissance of Scottish literature in the 1920s–30s.

Riach is general editor of Carcanet’s multi-volume complete MacDiarmid and since 1992 has been at the University of Waikato, teaching Scottish, American and other postcolonial literatures. His critical writings focus on the Scottish element in the literatures of Great Britain’s former colonies, especially in the British Guyanese novelist Wilson Harris and in contemporary New Zealand writers.

Riach’s own poetry reflects these obsessions, drawing on his life both in Scotland and New Zealand, his adopted homeland, as well as his reading of modern English, American and Scottish writers. Deploying a wide range of modern forms, from ‘projective verse’ to prose memoir, the poems range in tone from lyric sweetness to wry sarcasm.

Riach has published four volumes of poetry in New Zealand: For What It Is (with Peter McCarey, 1986); This Folding Map (1990); An Open Return (1991); and First & Last Songs (1995). He was considered ‘NZ’ enough to qualify for Bill *Manhire’s 100 New Zealand Poems (1993).

MH

Updated Information

Riach has published an edition of his version of Dante's 'Inferno': From the Vision of Hell: An Extract of Dante (Akros Publications, 1998).

Poems will appear in the Anthology of Scottish Literature; volume 3, edited by David McCordick, and in an exhibition of 'poster poems' at the National Museum of Scotland.

Riach's latest volume of poetry is Clearances (2001).

His latest book is Representing Scotland in Literature, Popular Culture and Iconography: The Masks of the Modern Nation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), which brings together a range of cultural studies. To redirect attention from the different disciplines to address the cultural productions of Scotland as comprehensive and inter-related phenomena, is the book's prerogative, from Burns to Braveheart. Nothing like it exists, attempting the trajectory of inclusiveness and yet affirming qualities of cultural distinctiveness, value and pleasure.

Comments on Companion Entry

Riach's doctorate was taken from the Department of Scottish Literature at Glasgow University - the only such department in existence - not the Department of Scottish Studies.

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