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Seriously...

Where Are All the Working Class Writers?

Seriously...

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.1885 Ratings

🗓️ 24 November 2017

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"The more we reinforce the stereotypes of who writes and who reads, the more the notion of exclusivity is reinforced. It takes balls to gatecrash a party."

Kit de Waal, published her first novel, My Name is Leon, in 2016 at the age of 55. She has already put her money where her mouth is - using part of the advance she received from Penguin to set up a creative writing scholarship in an attempt to improve working class representation in the arts.

Kit knows that - as a writer from a working class background - the success of her debut novel is a rare occurrence. Born to a Caribbean bus driver father and an Irish mother (a cleaner, foster carer and auxiliary nurse), Kit grew up in Birmingham and left school at 15 with no qualifications. She became a secretary with the Crown Prosecution Service and went on to have a career in social services and criminal law.

In this feature she explores an issue that is deeply personal to her. She looks back at her own life and trajectory, and takes the listener on a journey around the country to find out what the barriers really are to working class representation in British literature today.

"There is a difference between working class stories and working class writers. Real equality is when working class writers can write about anything they like - an alien invasion, a nineteenth century courtesan, a medieval war. All we need is the space, the time to do it - oh yes, and some way to pay the bills!"

Kit talks to a range of writers, agents and publishers about what the barriers are for writers from working class backgrounds, including Tim Lott, Andrew McMillan, Gena-mour Barrett, CEO of Penguin Random House UK Tom Weldon, Julia Bell, Julia Kingsford, Ben Gwalchmai, Nathan Connolly and Stephen Morrison-Burke (Birmingham poet laureate and the first recipient of the Kit de Waal scholarship).

Produced by Mair Bosworth.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This was an impregnable fortress. The only way you get out was in a wooden box.

0:05.0

The controversial maximum security prison impossible to escape from.

0:09.0

And one of the duties of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.0

The IRA inmates who found a way. of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.5

The IRA inmates who found a way.

0:14.5

I'm Carlo Gableer and I'll be navigating a path

0:19.5

through the disturbing inside story of the biggest jailbreak in British and Irish history.

0:25.0

The narrative that they want is that this is a big achievement by them.

0:28.5

Escape from the maze, listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:34.0

This is the BBC.

0:40.0

I walked down any street and it's full of these people who are like me, but I never see them represented in books.

0:47.0

Representation, Diversity, Inclusion, their words that pervade the world we live in.

0:56.3

But is the literary world a step behind?

0:59.6

Kit Duval brings us today's seriously interesting story and she certainly thinks so.

1:06.0

As does journalist Gina Moore Barrett.

1:09.0

I don't even see enough young black girls in literature, let alone a young black girl who lives on

1:13.8

accounts in the state who's working class who's in a single-print household and

1:16.4

her answer to the problem is I guess I'll just have to write it I'm

1:20.8

Riana Dylan and this is seriously. So where are all the working class writers?

1:27.0

I grew up in Birmingham and in our house there were only two things to read.

1:33.3

The Bible from my Irish mother and the news of the world that my Caribbean father brought home every Sunday.

1:39.6

I never expected to be a writer. I was working class. I was the daughter of immigrant parents.

...

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