Christopher Brennan Explained

Christopher Brennan
Birth Name:Christopher John Brennan
Birth Date:1 November 1870
Birth Place:Haymarket, New South Wales, Australia
Death Place:Lewisham, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality:Australian
Notableworks:Poems: 1913
The Prose of Christopher Brennan
The Verse of Christopher Brennan

Christopher John Brennan (1 November 1870 – 5 October 1932) was an Australian poet, scholar and literary critic.

Biography

Brennan was born in Haymarket, an inner suburb of Sydney,[1] to Christopher Brennan (d. 1919), a brewer, and his wife Mary Ann née Carroll (d. 1924), both Irish immigrants.[2] His education took place at two schools in Sydney: he first attended St Aloysius' College, and after gaining a scholarship from Patrick Moran, he boarded at St Ignatius' College, Riverview.[2]

Brennan entered the University of Sydney in 1888, taking up studies in the Classics, and won a travelling scholarship to Berlin. There he met his future wife, Anna Elisabeth Werth; there, also, he encountered the poetry of Stéphane Mallarmé.[2] About this time, he decided to become a poet. In 1893 Brennan's article "On the Manuscripts of Aeschylus" appeared in The Journal of Philology. Brennan began forming a theory about the descent of Aeschylus' extant manuscripts in 1888.[2]

Returning to Australia, Brennan took up a position as a cataloguer in the public library,[3] [4] before being given a position as assistant lecturer in French and German in the department of modern languages and literature and in 1920 the position of associate professor in German and comparative literature at the University of Sydney.[5] In 1914, he produced his major work, Poems: 1913.[6]

After Brennan's marriage broke up in 1922, he went to live with Violet Singer, the 'Vie' of his later poems,[2] and, as a result of both his divorce and increasing drunkenness, he was removed from his position at the university in June 1925. The death of Singer in an accident in the same year left him distraught, and he spent most of his remaining years in poverty. Brennan died in 1932 from cancer.

Legacy

Brennan influenced Australian writers of his own generation and many who succeeded him, including R. D. Fitzgerald, A. D. Hope, Judith Wright and James McAuley.[2] In remembrance, the Fellowship of Australian Writers established the Christopher Brennan Award which is presented annually to "an Australian poet who has written work of sustained quality and distinction".[7]

Brennan Hall and Library at St John's College within the University of Sydney, the Christopher Brennan building in the university's Arts Faculty, and the main library at Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview are named in his honour.[8]

There was for several decades a Christopher Brennan Society "founded in... the 1970s by Axel Clark, Robin Marsden and John Fletcher",[9] whose patrons included "some who knew Brennan: Professor A. R. Chisholm; Margaret Delmer; Professor Ralph Farrell; Sister Peter, of the Sisters of Charity; Walter Stone; Professor G. P. Shipp; Richard Pennington".[10]

Bibliography

Works by Brennan

Works about Brennan

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.middlemiss.org/lit/authors/brennanc/poems1913.html Poems (1913) by Christopher Brennen (1870-1932)
  2. Web site: Brennan, Christopher John (1870–1932). Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Edition. 17 April 2010.
  3. Book: Martin, Sylvia. Ida Leeson - A Life : Not a blue-stocking lady. 2006. Sydney : Allen & Unwin. 978-1-74176-206-8. English.
  4. Book: Perkins, Cathy. The shelf life of Zora Cross. 2020. Clayton, Victoria : Monash University Publishing. 978-1-925835-53-3. English.
  5. https://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A27110 Christopher Brennan
  6. P.L.J.W., "Australia's Supreme Poet. Christopher Brennan. Conflicting Claims.", The Age, 23 March 1946, p. 7.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20060827231443/http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/grants/program/10808-3580.htm Grants and Services detail
  8. http://library.riverview.nsw.edu.au/home Christopher Brennan Library
  9. [Elizabeth Webby]
  10. Helen Frizell, "Printout", The Sydney Morning Herald, 6 May 1978, p. 17.
  11. Ian Mair, "Brennan as a Prose Giant", The Age, 1 December 1962, p. 18. Retrieved 23 February 2019.