Bart Moore-Gilbert
Quick Facts
Biography
Bart Moore-Gilbert (8 December 1952 - 2 December 2015) was a Tanzanian born British academic, orientalist and political campaigner, most widely known for his work in the field of postcolonial literary studies and theory. His work has been translated into fifteen languages. Moore-Gilbert taught at Goldsmiths College, University of London, a position he held from 1998. His final academic study, the first critical assessment of postcolonial life-writing in English, was published by Routledge in June 2009.
In 2014, Verso published Moore-Gilbert's memoir, The Setting Sun: A Memoir of Empire and Family Secrets, a highly acclaimed account of his travels in India undertaken to shed light on his father's alleged role in acts of British colonial brutality. The book, which combined elements of travel writing, historical research and personal memoir, received positive reviews in The Guardian, Hürriyet Daily News, and Times Educational Supplement and was shortlisted for the PEN Ackerley Prize.
Moore-Gilbert died in Trinity Hospice on 2 December 2015 after a battle with kidney cancer. During his illness, he kept a blog tracing the development of his cancer and his treatment.
Selected publications
- Cultural Closure? The Challenge of the Arts in the 1970s ISBN 978-0415099059
- Cultural Revolution? The Challenge of the Arts in the 1960s ISBN 978-0415078245
- Postcolonial Theory: Contexts, Practices, Politics ISBN 978-1859840344
- Post Colonial Criticism (Longman Critical Reader) (ed) ISBN 978-0-582-23798-8
- Writing India (ed), 1757-1990: Literature of British India ISBN 978-0719042652
- Kipling and Orientalism ISBN 978-0709935056
- Hanif Kureishi ISBN 978-0719055355
- Postcolonial Life-Writing: Culture, Politics, and Self-Representation ISBN 978-0415443005
- The Setting Sun: A Memoir of Empire and Family Secrets ISBN 978-1781682685