Anthony Burgess

British author
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Also known as: John Anthony Burgess Wilson, Joseph Kell
Quick Facts
Also called:
Joseph Kell
Original name:
John Anthony Burgess Wilson
Born:
February 25, 1917, Manchester, England
Died:
November 22, 1993, London
Also Known As:
Joseph Kell
John Anthony Burgess Wilson

Anthony Burgess (born February 25, 1917, Manchester, England—died November 22, 1993, London) was an English novelist, critic, and man of letters whose fictional explorations of modern dilemmas combine wit, moral earnestness, and a note of the bizarre.

Trained in English literature and phonetics, Burgess taught in the extramural department of Birmingham University (1946–50), worked for the Ministry of Education (1948–50), and was English master at Banbury Grammar School (1950–54). He then served as education officer in Malaya and Borneo (1954–59), where he wrote three novels with a Malayan setting.

Back in England he became a full-time and prolific professional writer. Under the pseudonym Anthony Burgess he wrote the novels The Wanting Seed (1962), an antiutopian view of an overpopulated world, and Honey for the Bears (1963). As Joseph Kell he wrote One Hand Clapping (1961) and Inside Mr. Enderby (1963).

A Clockwork Orange (1962; film 1971) made Burgess’s reputation as a novelist of comic and mordant power. The novel is written in a teenage argot of Burgess’s invention, combining elements from British and American slang, Russian, and other sources. It examines society’s unsuccessful attempt to psychologically “rehabilitate” an incurably violent juvenile delinquent. Other novels include The Eve of Saint Venus (1964) and Enderby Outside (1968). The latter is part of a series of humorous novels centred around the lyric poet F.X. Enderby, whom many critics have seen as a stand-in for Burgess himself. His later works include Earthly Powers (1980), The End of the World News (1983), The Kingdom of the Wicked (1985), Any Old Iron (1989), and A Dead Man in Deptford (1993). In his novels Burgess combined linguistic ingenuity and witty erudition with picaresque plots, bizarre story premises, and sharp social satire. Although his vision of modern society is a pessimistic one, his fiction is generally comic.

Burgess was the author of more than 50 books. In addition to novels and short stories, he was known for his works of literary criticism, including Here Comes Everybody: An Introduction to James Joyce for the Ordinary Reader (1965). He wrote television scripts, did translations for the stage, and wrote biographies of William Shakespeare, D.H. Lawrence, and Ernest Hemingway. Burgess also produced dozens of musical compositions, including choral works and orchestral pieces. He wrote a two-volume autobiography, Little Wilson and Big God: Being the First Part of the Confessions of Anthony Burgess (1987) and You’ve Had Your Time: Being the Second Part of the Confessions of Anthony Burgess (1990).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.