Birth Date: | 22 August 1924 |
Birth Place: | Chiswick, London, England |
Death Place: | Sussex, England |
Education: | Emmanuel College, Cambridge |
Occupation: | Independent scholar |
Notable Works: | Modern Poetry from Africa (1963) |
Gerald Moore (22 August 1924 – 27 December 2022) was an English independent scholar.
Moore was born in Chiswick, London, to Rex Moore, an exhibitions officer, and his wife, Norah (nee Sturdee), an actor, on 22 August 1924.[1] He went to Dauntsey's School in Wiltshire, and when he was 17 years old joined the Royal Navy, serving in the Atlantic and Arctic convoys during World War 2.[1] He later studied at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he earned a first-class degree in English.[1] [2]
Moore taught at many universities, including the Sussex, Hong Kong, Makerere, Ife, Port Harcourt, Jos and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His last teaching post was at Trieste. He was primarily a scholar of contemporary African anglophone and francophone poetry. With Ulli Beier, he edited the influential Modern Poetry from Africa (1963), a comprehensive anthology, republished in 1984 as The Penguin Book of Modern African Poetry.[3]
In 1949, he married Joy Fisher, a librarian, with whom he had three children.[1] The couple divorced in 1973, and Moore subsequently married Miriam Garzitto.[1]
Moore lived in Worthing, Sussex,[4] before moving to Udine in Italy. He later returned to Sussex, in 2010, after his wife Miriam died. Moore died on 27 December 2022, at the age of 98.[1]
As translator: