Peter Pan - Chapter 2

Peter Pan - Chapter 3
Irvine Welsh
Irvine Welsh was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. He had a very confusing life in the early years and couldn’t remember that much, but he knew that his family and he moved a lot from town to town. In the age of 16 Welsh left Ainsley Park Secondary School while working with different jobs at the same time. In the seventies Welsh moved to London where he was fascinated by the punk culture. But reality bit him. Because he left school early he needed to get more educated if he wanted to get better jobs. And it paid off. He began to get better jobs but he was homesick and in the end he: “found a nice lassie and settled doon”, returned to Edinburgh, started working at the city council and began to study at Heriot Watt University. Welsh was very happy being home again and inspired by other authors such as Kevin Williamson, Duncan McLean, Alan Warner and Barry Graham and thrilled by the rave scene he started writing. And by putting old diary notes together he made a draft of what later would be a success, Trainspotting. Which … will tell about little later. Parts of the draft, a novel, were published in 1991 in the West Cost Magazine and by help from McLean and Williamson the novel got published in other magazines. And then McLean recommended Welsh and Trainspotting to Robin Robertson, a director of publishing agency called Secker & Warburg, whom decided to publish Trainspotting.
When Trainspotting came in the stores in 1993 it turned out to be a popular novel, and Irvine Welsh became very famous for his work. Even though his job with Trainspotting was so acknowledged, he was rejected from a Booker Prize because two female judges felt offended by it. The critic was hard, but Trainspotting was both made into a film and a stage play. The stage play was the first of them, and became the start of Irvine Welsh's career. The play was shown for the first time at the Glasgow Mayfest and later on it took part in the Edinburgh Festival. This resulted in Welsh quitting his day job, because he got so much success with the play, and now had to tour around in UK. When the film was released in 1996 Welsh really became a respected author among the UK-citizens. And when his latest novels, with the more sensational titles (“Porno”, “The bedroom secrets of the master chefs”) was published, his popularity also went strong in Canada and the states.
As a new thing Irvine Welsh has gone into the film production business. He has become a partner in Four Ways films and in Jawbone.
Novels:
• Trainspotting
• Marabou Stork Nightmares
• Filth
• Glue
• Porno
• The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs
Crime
Writing style:
He is known for writing in his native Edinburgh scots dialect.
Some international versions of his books have included a glossary in the end, because some may have difficulties understanding the text, without knowledge to the dialect.
In his novels the characters are often present in several of them, so they kinda share the universe. It's the same characters you follow, through several books.
Inspiration:
Welsh was in the London punk scene environment for a while, which may have been an inspiration in his writings.
An example is the novel 'Trainspotting', which is about a group of young people in Edinburgh, who are heroin addicts - which is also the main topic.
The novel explores what causes drug addiction and what sustains(keeps it going/opretholder) it.
The novel is very popular, have even recieved cult status, and have also been made into a film.
Main topics in his novels:
The topics in Irvine Welsh is mainly drug use.
But another important theme in the stories is the scottish working class and scottish identity in the period from 1960 until today.
The topics he write about also includes:
• The rise and fall of the council housing scheme
• Denial of opportunity
• Sectarianism
• Football
• Hooliganism
• Sex
• Suppressed homosexuality
• Dance clubs
• Low-paid work
• Freemasonry
• Irish republicanism
• Sodomy
• Class divisions
Emigration
..and, perhaps most of all, the humour, prejudices and axioms of the Scots.
J. M. Barrie
J. M. Barries biggest success was the play about Peter Pan – the story about the boy who didn’t want to grow up. The inspiration for this play came when he met the woman Sylvia Llwelyn Davis. She had four sons, and their father had just died, so Barrie became a kind of guardian to them. He played with them in their garden, and from the stories they made up while playing, he wrote the play.
The Land Neverland already developed when Barrie was a young boy. When he lost his older brother David and watched his mother’s greave, he had to grow up, and so he grew up way too quickly, and he didn’t really understand what became of the boy in him. And so he told himself that he went to Neverland. A wonderful place with no harm, only fun. And when he met the Davis-boys, he used Neverland to tell their story.
The character of Peter Pan is named after the next youngest boy, Peter. The story about it is that Peter tried to grow up very fast because of his fathers death, and Barrie didn’t want the boys to grow up. He loved kids because they have this wonderful imagination, and he hated grown-ups because they were so boring. So Peter, who wanted to grow up, inspired him to write a story about a boy, who didn’t want to grow up.
But the funny thing is that the Peter Pan-character was more like a Barrie himself. In the movie ‘Finding Neverland’ this is described in one of the last scenes. It’s just after the premiere of the play and some of the audience hear that Barrie calls Peter ‘Peter’, so they say ‘Oh my God, it’s Peter Pan, this little boy is Peter Pan”. And then Peter looks up at mr Barrie and says “No, I’m not. He is.” It was Barrie who didn’t want to grow up. He always stayed a child in his mind, even though he had to grow up on the outside. So Peter Pan is in a way a story about Barrie himself.
James Barrie was a Scottish journalist, playwright and children's book writer.
Barrie became world famous with his play and story about PETER PAN (1904), the boy who lived in Never Land, had a war with Captain Hook, and would not grow up. The first name of Peter Pan was taken from Peter Llewellyn Davies
James Matthew Barrie was born in the Lowland village of Kirriemuir, in Forfarshire (now Angus). He was son of David and Margaret Barrie. They had ten children, and Barrie was the ninth. James Barrie heard tales of pirates from his mother, who read her children adventure stories in the evenings, and many of the stories concerning it inspired later Barrie's work.
When Barrie was seven, his brother David died in a skating accident. David had been the mother's favorite child, and she fell into depression after his dead. Barrie tried to gain the mothers affection by dressing up in the dead boy's clothes. The obsessive relationship that grew between mother and son was to mark the whole of his life. After her death Barrie published in 1896 an adoring biography on her.
At the age of 13, Barrie left his home village. At school he became interested in theatre. His classmates observed Barrie like an outsider, they were tall, interested in girls, while he remained small and apparently never had a girlfriend. Barrie studied at Dumfries Academy at the University of Edinburgh. After working as a journalist for the Nottingham Journal, he moved in 1885 with empty pockets to London were he began his carrier.