The Life of Una Marson 1905-1965
Delia Jarrett-Macauley
Manchester University Press, 1998
Una Marson, a Jamaican, was the first Black woman programme
maker at the BBC. She worked for the BBC from 1939 to 1946
and helped many service men and women and Caribbean people
during the war. She had come to England in 1932 intending
to stay for a few weeks. Like many migrant people she stayed
for many years. At first while living in Peckham, south London,
she worked as secretary to the League of Coloured Peoples,
the first Black-led political organisation in England. But
before long she became well known in London as a feminist
activist who talked about Black women's experiences such as
discrimination in the nursing profession. She joined the Women's
International League for Peace and other organisations. England
made Una Marson more aware of race equality issues around
the world - from West Africa to the US - and as secretary
to Haile Selassie she traveled to the League of Nations with
him in 1936 to plead for Abyssinia.
Among her BBC colleagues were George Orwell and TS Eliot;
among her African-American writer friends she counted Langston
Hughes and James Weldon Johnson. As the first major woman
poet of the Caribbean and a playwright, she has gained a reputation
as a literary pioneer. Her life was varied and exciting: on
the invitation of Golda Meir, she worked in Haifa, Israel,
during the early 1960s. Almost thirty years before she had
set up the Jamaican Save the Children Fund, pleaded the cause
of Rastafarian children and assisted Norman Manley in the
anti-colonial struggle. She loved her country although for
many years she was away from home.
The Life of Una Marson 1905-1965 tells us how a 20th century
black woman from a small Jamaican village could become the
first major Caribbean woman poet, a playwright, feminist activist
and broadcaster. Stuart Hall has called the book 'a significant
contribution to the work of historical memory'.
Let her be remembered and honoured.
Delia Jarrett-Macauley
http://www.deliajarrettmacauley.com/
Some reviews of 'The Life of Una Marson 1905-1965'
'A compelling biography of the Jamaican-born activist'.
Margaret Busby, Sunday Times
'A significant contribution to the work of historical
memory'.
Stuart Hall
'Thoroughly researched and well documented, this is a
major event in the field of Caribbean cultural studies'.
Dr. Stewart Brown, University of Birmingham
'A balanced and genuinely inspiring appraisal�.'
Kevin Le Gendre, Independent on Sunday
'An excellent biography of a previously little known woman�.it
is time Una Marson got some credit.'
Caroline Benn, North West Labour History
[See books in the Una
Marson category
of our bookshop]
Blue Plaque Award 2005
Una Marson the first female black programme
maker for the BBC has been awarded a blue plaque by Southwark
Council. More details can be found on www.southwark.gov.uk/blueplaques.
Articles from www.chronicleworld.org
Sistah Soul-jah: The Caribbean poet who captured the rhythms
of resistance
Love of her Afro-Caribbean heritage helped Una Marson affirm
her right as a woman and a writer to be both Black and
British
Una
Marson (right), TS Eliot (left), George Orwell and colleague
(rear)
Somewhere between her birth in middle class rural Jamaica,
her pioneering social work in Kingston's slum yards, and
her expatriate life in London at war, the lovelorn country
girl Una Marson (1905-65) became a fighting partisan of Black
poetics and politics.
After decades of obscurity, the first major West Indian
woman poet is the subject of a book by Delia Jarrett-Macauley,
The Life of Una Marson. In this enlightening work, Marson
emerges as a prime narrator of major themes affecting Black
women writers of Caribbean origin.
Two large issues provoked her work and excites attention.
She captured the calypsonian air of topical stories, sounds
and music; and she exposed colonial fears and prejudices.
Today, no less than in Marson's time, her interwoven themes
of cultural identity and female sexuality, of self-doubt
and disadvantage, require intimate inspection.
To many admirers her Black poetics and politics offer a
firm basis for a writer's commitment to a fair and equal
world. Marson delved deep into the multi-layered heritage
of Blacks in colonial Jamaica. Her poetic tributes to her
ancestral African roots soar into an anthem of universal
humanity.
- In Songs of Africa (1930) she applauds the music of
Afro-Creole people of the Americas that fosters race pride
and the determination
to be free. Fragments of colour, people, places and warmth
form an intricate pattern.
- Again, in There will come a time (1931) she cries out
for racial equality as the foundation of her dream of the
oneness
of the world's diverse peoples.
- Her poem To Mothers (1931)
is a praise-song to women of all races seeking to build
a world of equality. Years later, this theme is celebrated
in The
Moth and the Star (1937), her third collection of poems.
Uniquely, Marson illustrates how women used poetry to express
their sufferings and avoid terrible retribution, like the
Black preacher during slavery. Her first collection of love
poems Tropic Reveries (1930), set in Jamaican colonial culture,
explores women's political and subversive yearning for freedom
from cultural domination.
In London, this yearning conflicted sharply with the modish
white-affected Anglo-Black fashions. Marson's poem Kinky
Hair Blues, explores the damaged self-image of Black women
in a society where white is the definition of beauty and
Afro-Caribbean lips, hips and hair are devalued.
Her use of local tones and voices never really satisfied
Black bourgeois tastes and attitudes. Liberal whites were
uncomfortable with her affirmation that black is beautiful.
You are struck by the writer's searingly courageous stance.
The mass of Marson's literary output shows that her political
views were no sudden eruption. They were always at hand strengthening
her Black poetics.
In the 1930s while writing love poems she had set up the
Jamaican Save the Children Fund, pleaded the cause of Rastafarian
children and assisted the firebrand politician Norman Manley
in the anti-colonial struggle.
In war time London, as Churchill launched his appeal to
Britain's colonials to join his fight on the seas, the landing
grounds and battlefields, Marson joined the BBC. She was
appointed to the West Indian broadcasting service of the
Empire division. West Indies Calling was her maiden programme
in her five years of association with BBC, 1940 to 1945.
Early on she enjoyed reading her poetry and consorting with
the writers TS Eliot and Eric Blair (George Orwell) of the
India service. Then came her golden opportunity. She founded
her own programme, Caribbean Voices, in March 1943, and became
the BBCs first Black woman producer.
Her programme format was simple, recalls Glyne Griffith
in an internet article on the development of Caribbean literature.
Voices was broadcast on Sundays from London studios to eager
listeners in the anglophone Caribbean. Marson and invited
literary figures would discuss the submitted works of aspiring
poets and fiction writers in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados
and Guyana.
But, she became increasingly sceptical and disenchanted
with the "internal battles and troubled moments" with
BBC managers. They thought only of promoting British authors
to Caribbean listeners, she remarked upon her departure from
service in 1945.
(That the BBCs overseas services were influenced by government
policy to requisition colonial labour and resources while
stifling nationalist activism was another issue that, loyal
subject as she was, she could never reconcile.)
The boldness of this move in wartime London, especially
for a dependant Black woman, was remarkable. Again her political
instincts were tested as she expanded her social work skills
and political interests. She put her energies into helping
disadvantaged Black people in south London. Taking a crucial
step in her political upbringing, she worked with Dr George
Moody in the League of Coloured People, the first Black-led
race equality and anti-colonialist organisation in England.
In the company of activist CLR James and the welfare officer
and cricketer Learie Constantine, Marson honed her skills
in political poetry. Her narrative wartime poem Convoy, which
appeared in the League's journal, salutes "my own blood
brothers/ Brown like me�"
She could hardly contain her anger at racial discrimination
in her scathing poem Towards the Stars (1945). The hated
colour-bar was as evident in metropolitan London as in colonial
Kingston. In the poem Politeness she wrote:
"They tell us
That our skin is black
But our hearts are white
We tell them
That their skin is white
But their hearts are black"
Throughout her life, interrupted by bouts of despondency,
Marson promoted the rights of women. She railed against
the maltreatment of women workers, students and nurses,
and joined the radical Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom.
Convinced that achieving Black solidarity around the world
was the prelude to Black Freedom, Marson welcomed Jamaican
Marcus Garvey's pan-Africanist message of "African liberation,
at home and abroad". As a writer, she kept in touch
with the icons of the "Harlem Renaissance", African
Americans writers Langston Hughes and James Weldon Johnson.
As a political activist, she travelled with Emperor Haile
Selassie to the League of Nations in 1936 to protest Italy's
invasion and violation of Ethiopia's sovereignty.
Looking back, it is extraordinary that it was a radio programme,
Caribbean Voices, under Marson's initial stewardship, which
so crucially introduced Caribbean poetry to white metropolitan
audiences. She sensed that radio, the supreme voice-to-ear
mass medium, admirably suited New World Afro-Caribbeans and
their lively speech patterns.
There is another fact derived from Marson's efforts that
is self-evident now. Awareness of colonial history and racism
in the pre-independence British West Indies is essential
to appreciating the cultural context of Caribbean literature.
- "Understanding this talented woman is now more
urgently required than ever before," says Prof Stuart
Hall, the West Indian-born social scientist. And there
are several
reasons for this.
- Her life "bridges the gap between
the 'coloured' middle class world of pre-independence Jamaica,
the literary
life of wartime London and the emerging 'politics of colour'
of the inter-war years", he says.
- She represents a
courageous struggle by Black men and women "to live
an independent and racially conscious life in the years before
the 'mass' Caribbean migration [to
Britain] of the 60s," says Professor Hall.
Doubtlessly, if Una Marson had published her own story of
her life in Britain during the 1930s and 1940s we would know
more about her thoughts and interests. Among the striking
conclusions that we can draw, however, is that her autobiography
would have predated and contrasted perfectly with the seminal,
but male-perceived, works of the Trinidadian Samuel Selvon's
The Lonely Londoners (1956) and the Barbadian George Lamming's
The Emigrants (1954)
The personal reflections of this articulate and politically
active Black woman in inter-war England need to be unearthed,
says Marson's biographer Delia Jarrett-Macauley. Sadly, when
asked, today's heirs of Marson's service to the West Indies
(of whom Trinidadian-born Sir Trevor McDonald, the elder
statesman of Black broadcasters is a prominent beneficiary),
know little about her.
In all probability, the record of the first Black woman
BBC radio producer has been erased and recycled, and lost
forever. As a result, Afro-Britons are unable to reclaim,
yet again, another part of their heritage in Britain.
Nevertheless, from what we know, if the poetics and politics
of Una Marson were summarised in a message to today's Black
women writers, the words might read:
No more moaning and groaning
No more self-hatred masquerading as integration.
No more rejecting your own Ethiop's child for somebody else's Barbie doll.
You are part of a strong African-Caribbean influenced literary tradition.
Affirm your right as an individual, a woman and a writer to be both Black and
British.
Further reading
Delia Jarrett-Macauley, The Life of Una Marson (1905 - 1965).
Manchester University Press 1998
And, for works on postcolonial writing and theory, in particular
Caribbean literature and women's writing, on feminist theory
and its intersection with postcolonial theory, and on Black
British writing and contemporary culture, see:
Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture (Routledge,
2001)
The Veil: Postcolonialism and the Politics of Dress, Special
Issue of Interventions, 1.4 (1999)
Caribbean Women Writers: Fiction in English, ed. Maryse
Conde (Macmillan, 1999)
'Sentimental Subversions: the poetics and politics of devotion
in the poetry of Una Marson', in Kicking Daffodils: essays
on Twentieth-Century Women's Poetry, ed. Vicki Bertram
(Edinburgh University Press,1997) "
The Routledge Reader in Caribbean Literature (Routledge,
1996)
Deconstructing Nationalisms: Henry Swanzy, Caribbean
Voices and the Development of West Indian Literature. Glyne Griffith.
Small Axe, Number 10
Article: Sistah Soul-jah: The Caribbean poet
who captured the rhythms of resistance
�
Copyright 1997-2005 Chronicle World -
first published 22/11/03
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