Difference between revisions of "Douglas Ridley Beeton"

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==Biography==
 
==Biography==
  
He started his career as librarian at the CSIR, and later became Professor and head of [[UNISA]] Department of English. He was an accomplished poet under the name of [[Roger Brirely]].
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He started his career as librarian at the CSIR, and later became Professor and head of [[UNISA]] Department of English till his retirement in 1984.  
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He was also a council member of the [[Human Sciences Research Council]] from 1976 till his retirement, and was elected as President of the [[English Academy of South Africa]] on three occasions .
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His poetry was published in various journals as well as in two collections, ''The Landscape of Requirement'' (1981) and ''Tattoos'' (1983).
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He was furthermore the editor of ''A Pilot Bibliography of South African English Literature'' (1976) and one of the compilers of the ''Companion to South African English Literature'', a founding editor (with Helen Dorner) of the journal ''English Usage in Southern Africa'' and the ''Dictionary of English Usage in Southern Africa'' (1975).
  
 
He died in Cape Town in April 1997.
 
He died in Cape Town in April 1997.

Revision as of 05:53, 25 May 2023

Douglas Ridley Beeton (1929-1997) was an lecturer, academic, poet and editor.

Also known as D.R. Beeton or simply Ridley Beeton

Biography

He started his career as librarian at the CSIR, and later became Professor and head of UNISA Department of English till his retirement in 1984.

He was also a council member of the Human Sciences Research Council from 1976 till his retirement, and was elected as President of the English Academy of South Africa on three occasions .

His poetry was published in various journals as well as in two collections, The Landscape of Requirement (1981) and Tattoos (1983).

He was furthermore the editor of A Pilot Bibliography of South African English Literature (1976) and one of the compilers of the Companion to South African English Literature, a founding editor (with Helen Dorner) of the journal English Usage in Southern Africa and the Dictionary of English Usage in Southern Africa (1975).

He died in Cape Town in April 1997.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

His theatre works include a collection entitled Four South African One-Act Plays (Cape Town: Nasou, 1973).

Sources

Obituary published in Pretoria News, 29 April 1997.

Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography

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