Hugh Maxton (born 1947), alias W. J. McCormack, is an Irishpoet and academic.
Biography
William (Bill) John McCormack was born near Aughrim, County Wicklow in 1947. His parents were Irene (née King) and Charles Elliott McCormack. His father died from a heart attack when William was 13 years old.[1] He attended Rathgar (Methodist) National School and won a scholarship to Wesley College, Dublin (1959-65). He proceeded to Trinity College Dublin from which he graduated with a BA (1971). He was awarded a D.Phil. by the New University of Ulster (1974). He lectured both at the Coleraine and Magee College campuses of that university before proceeding to the University of Leeds. He was awarded a personal chair in Literary History at Goldsmiths, University of London in 1995.
[2]
Writing
As a poet, he adopted the name Hugh Maxton, supposedly from the Scottish socialist James Maxton. He has written a large number of books of poetry as well as translations from Hungarian and German.[3]
As a literary critic, he has written using his registered name William J. McCracken. His specialism is 19th- and 20th-century Irish literature.[4]
Works
Poetry
Poems 2000-2005 (Dublin: Carysfort Press 2005).
Same Bridge Perhaps, and Other Fugitive Poems with a postface by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin (Dublin: Duras Press 2013).
Gubu Roi: Poems and Satires (Belfast: Lagan Press 2000), 90pp.
The Engraved Passion: New and Selected Poems 1970-1991 (Dublin: Dedalus 1992), 116pp.
The Puzzle Tree Ascendant (Dublin: Dedalus 1988).
At the Protestant Museum (Dublin: Dolmen 1986), 53pp.