Record

LevelFonds
Finding Number (Click this to view full catalogue structure)MS2
TitlePapers of Walter Allen
Extent7 boxes
Date[1930s]-1995
DescriptionLiterary and personal papers of Walter Ernest Allen (1911-1995), novelist and literary critic, 1911-1995, comprising manuscripts of published novels, manuscripts of unpublished novels, manuscripts of other published works, copies of published articles, reviews and broadcasts, poetry, other writings, contracts and correspondence with publishers, publisher' agents and other institutions and a small amount of personal correspondence
ArrangementThe papers are arranged into seven series: manuscripts of unpublished novels, manuscripts of published novels, manuscripts of other published works, copies of published articles, reviews, and broadcasts, poetry, other writings, contracts and correspondence with publishers, publishers' agents and other institutions and personal correspondence
Access ConditionsAccess to all registered researchers.
LanguageEnglish
Finding AidsA catalogue of this collection is available on the online archive catalogue. Click on the Finding Number to display the summary contents list of the catalogue and to view the full catalogue. A paper copy of this catalogue is also available for consultation at Special Collections.
Access StatusOpen
Administrative HistoryWalter Allen, born in Birmingham in 1911, was the fourth son of Charles Allen and his wife, Annie. He was educated at King Edward's Grammar School, Aston and then at Birmingham University. After graduation he became a freelance writer and during the course of his career was a prolific contributor to all kinds of publications. Allen was one of a small group of novelists, which included John Hampson, Henry Green and Leslie Halward, working in Birmingham in the later 1930s. His first novel, Innocence is Drowned, was published in 1938, and this was shortly followed by Blind Man's Ditch (1939) and Living Space (1940). He subsequently went on to publish four more novels; All in a Lifetime published in 1959 is considered his finest. Allen is perhaps better known for his works of literary criticism, particularly for his two studies of the novel, The English Novel: A Short Critical History (1954) and Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our Time (1964). Other critical works included studies of Arnold Bennett (1948) and George Eliot (1964) and he also published his autobiography in 1981 under the title As I Walked Down New Grub Street.

As a literary journalist, Allen was employed as features editor for Cater's News Agency, Birmingham, 1935-37 and he was also a reviewer for the New Statesman in the later 1940s and 1950s, becoming Assistant Literary, then Literary Editor for the period 1959-61. He also held various teaching posts and visiting professorships, particularly in North America, and from 1967 until 1973, he was Professor of English at the New University of Ulster, Coleraine.

Walter Allen married Peggy Joy in 1944, by whom he had two sons and two daughters. He died on 28 February 1995, aged 84.
AcquisitionThis collection was deposited by Mrs Peggy Y. Allen, widow of Walter Allen, 23 April 1997. An addition to this collection, comprising a carbon typescript of another of Allen's published novels, was presented in July 2002 by the descendants of friends of Walter Allen (see MS2/1/3). A further addition of a small amount of personal correspondence was made by the family of Walter Allen in September 2010.

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