Up-helly-aa festival is celebrated throughout towns and villages in Shetland, towards the end of January and into February. It is a fitting time of year, then, to promote our newly published catalogue for the oral history project of historian, and previous director of the Scottish Oral History Centre, Callum Brown which explores the important community festival.
In 1997 Callum Brown interviewed residents of Lerwick and Bressay to find out more about the Up-Helly-Aa festivals that take place there. These interviews give wonderful descriptions of different aspects of the festival, including: the preparations; Jarl squads and their duties; dances; costumes; the Bill (a notice board produced for Up-helly-aa that includes local jokes and satire featuring members of the community); the role of women and children in the festival, and the procession itself.
Please contact us if you would like access to the transcripts and recordings of these fascinating interviews.
Professor Callum Brown published a book following this project: 'Up-Helly-Aa: custom, culture and community in Shetland', 1998. This is available in the University of Strathclyde Library collection or available for consultation in the Archives and Special Collections reading room.
Further information:
Scottish Oral History Centre Archive: Up-Helly-Aa oral history project catalogue (ref: SOHC 14).
[Image above: Up-Helly-Aa festival procession in Uyeasound. Source: Wikimedia Commons.]
Last year we were honoured to receive an accession of great cultural significance. The papers of Scottish writer and author of the novel The Dear Green Place, Archie Hind, were thought lost by the Scottish Literature community but our colleague Dr Eleanor Bell, Department of Humanities, made contact with the family and discovered that they still existed. Eleanor liaised with the family to arrange the transfer of the collection to the University of Strathclyde Archives and Special Collections for safe keeping.
The collection includes correspondence with family, friends, colleagues and publishers; photographs; scrapbooks; and manuscripts of Hind’s writing including The Dear Green Place, as well as a number of plays. Eleanor anticipates a wealth of research potential:
‘Archie Hind (1928-2008) is perhaps best known for his 1966 novel, The Dear Green Place. The literary importance of the novel was quickly recognised, both in Scotland and beyond, winning both the Guardian Fiction Prize and the Yorkshire Post Best Fiction of the Year. While The Dear Green Place is widely regarded as one of the most important Scottish novels of the twentieth century, few resources exist on Hind’s work. The manuscript of his famous novel has often assumed to be lost, or perhaps burned. So, imagine our excitement when we discovered that not only was the manuscript still in existence, but also many other significant papers relating to his life and work.
I have been teaching The Dear Green Place for many years as part of my undergraduate module on ‘The Glasgow Novel’. One of the most compelling aspects of the text for students is that it tells the story of a writer, Mat Craig, struggling to write his own Glasgow novel. Up until now I’ve never been able to tell the students very much about Hind. It has therefore been a real privilege to spend time with Archie’s family over the past year and to find out more about the context of his life and work.
As implied by its title, The Dear Green Place demonstrates a deep connection with, as well as a deep love for, the city of Glasgow. However, its vision is far from romantic. The first page of the novel sets the scene for the early years of post-industrialism in the city:
Over the next few years, we are planning a series of events and publications leading up to Archie’s centenary year in 2028. There is much to explore, and this blog series will provide updates on our research findings along the way. As well as exploring the context of his life and work, we will also be examining Archie’s literary friendships with many writers including Edwin and Willa Muir, Alasdair Gray, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Jean Ure – to name just a few. Piecing together the history of Hind’s life via the papers donated provides a fascinating cultural history of literature and the arts in Scotland from the 1960s through to the end of the century. There are many pieces of this jigsaw just waiting to be put together.’
If you have any memories or papers relating to the life and work of Archie Hind, we would love to hear from you (eleanor.bell@strath.ac.uk).
The family are as delighted as we are with the papers being looked after at the University of Strathclyde:
The papers must be processed before they can be accessible to researchers, but we are greatly looking forward to collaborating with Eleanor this year on a funding bid to fully catalogue and research this important literary archive.
The collection will join our other Glasgow-focused collections at the University of Strathclyde including the Robertson Special Collection of printed works about the history and descriptions of Glasgow, and also the Glasgow Novel Collection: fictional works in which the city of Glasgow is an integral element or theme.
Stay tuned to our blog where we will share exciting news and developments in the Archie Hind Centenary Project.