I’d been exercised by the second half of this all day, and then I see that not only has Rob Mackenzie blogged about it already, but Roddy Lumsden has replied in the comments section.
Briefly, Roddy is baffled by the sparse number of established Scottish poets in my generation: those born in the 1970s and 1980s. He’s not the only person to feel the dearth: Bill Herbert explores it briefly in the endorsement he did for The Ambulance Box (which you can read in full at the link) and Donny O’Rourke alluded to it when he spoke to Rob and me at Mirrorball. Heck, I‘ve felt it over the past decade, when I think about it. And during my time at Edinburgh uni, when Roddy was on the cusp of publishing his first collection, there were precious few other Scots involved in student poetry. I come across none of them now in the poetry world.
Perhaps what we need(ed) is more good poets teaching, not in the academic creative writing courses, but in open access, informal or evening class-style courses. More of what Roddy does in London (please move back here, Mr Lumsden!) and what others have been doing through Mirrorball’s mentoring scheme, the like of which doesn’t exist elsewhere in the central belt, to my knowledge. More to bust us out of our wee lonesome bubbles.
There’s no Poetry School up here. Looks like the furthest north they’ve got is Newcastle. Try searching their courses on “Scotland” (which is an option) and you get:
No courses match your search criteria. Try searching again with fewer stipulations.
Thanks. Does the existence of the option mean they’re thinking of breaking into Scotland? I suppose the georgaphy is less of an issue now with internet courses becoming available, but I guess not everybody will teach or take those. Maybe we just need to get on and do something about it up here ourselves. What and how I’m not sure. Suggestions, anyone?

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