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Cultural Representations of Jimmy Boyle and the Barlinnie Special Unit Professor Mike Nellis University of Strathclyde. Poverty-born - Gorbals delinquent from 12 - then gangland enforcer 1967 - Sentenced to life for a murder (which he denied) - police exultant at conviction
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Cultural Representations of Jimmy Boyle and the Barlinnie Special UnitProfessor Mike Nellis University of Strathclyde
Poverty-born - Gorbals delinquent from 12 - then gangland enforcer 1967 - Sentenced to life for a murder (which he denied) - police exultant at conviction Very violent in prison - served time in solitary in HMP Inverness “cages” - officers were violent in turn Jimmy Boyle b1944
Macleod (2004) The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Scotland). • Boyle, Jimmy (1944-) Reformed criminal, now artist and writer, b Gorbals, Glasgow. His youth was spent in remand homes and prisons for a variety of crimes, and his later membership of a violent gang led to several charges of murder, on the third of which he was imprisoned in Barlinnie. A rehabilitation programme there led him to develop an interest in sculpture and writing. Since his release he has worked to help young offenders. His publications include the autobiographical A Sense of Freedom (1977) and a novel, Hero of the Underworld (1999).
Therapeutic community for ten of Scotland’s most violent prisoners Boyle (& Larry Winters) in the first five Set up in D Wing of HMP Barlinnie, Glasgow (Ken Murray) Art therapy (Joyce Laing) was an after- thought …. … but a crucial catalyst Barlinnie Special Unit 1973-1996
Richard Demarco & Joseph Beuys Visits & Visitors
Tom McGrath, upcoming playwright, art centre manager and underground writer, approached Boyle Play focus on poverty, violence & repression Staged in Traverse Theatre - toured Britain Acclaimed……though police tried to boycott it “The Hardman” 1977
Written in BSU;therapy? Extracts in several major Scottish and English newspapers Very well reviewed - as serious prison literature One of Scotland’s 100 best books in 2005. Never out of print for over 25 years Full story? Sales? Memoir 1977
The Initial Issues • The BSU is not punishment - close it! • Boyle does not deserve opportunities • Boyle is devious - playing the system • Prisoners should not be allowed to express views on the prison system • BSU brought Scotland international acclaim in penal reform - and embarrassment at home • Liberal middle class Scotland - headed by arts community - saw Boyle as vindication of liberal hopes - decency & rehabilitation works
Boyle released from prison after serving 15 years in 1982 Married psychiatrist Sarah Trevelyan Moved to Edinburgh & together they set up Gateway Exchange Published Diary - well reviewed Diaries 1984
Third Eye Centre had done several mini-exhibitions of BSU works Venice Biennale Joyce Laing co-curated biggest exhibition in Glasgow Art Exhibition: Glasgow
Expressing new Channel 4’s social commitment Writer: Peter McDougal Director John McKenzie Concentrates on Boyle’s violence & penal inhumanity (the cages) - no mention of BSU - but ending is iconic a loss, said JimmyReid) Accompanied by major TV discussion on penal reform Channel 4 TV Film
1980s and 1990s • Post-prison - Boyle becomes a serious celebrity - writes on penal reform - speaks at conferences - sculpts commercially and imports champagne - supports Labour - his life is under scrutiny • Middle class Scotland remains divided - undercurrent among some - he has not changed - evidence of entrepreneurship but not criminality - no previous models for this - his supporters “romanticise” him • Police memoirs ignore him: tabloids call him “Killer Boyle” no matter what he does - resent his success - feel he “beat the system” • Working class Scotland is also ambivalent, Many find it hard to forgive his - and those still like him predatoriness as an enforcer.
A fearful but brave hero in a surreal novel: drew on people from Gateway National book tour - some Scottish boycotts 2000: Boyle and Sarah separated Boyle moved to France .. later Morocco …and remarried in 2005 Sculpts … and does property development - occasional media interest in this. A Long Gestated Novel 1999
Boyle’s story is the thread in a film about precarious use of arts in French prisons French Documentary 2001
The original has been acclaimed as a great Scottish play Often performed in rep. Boyle was involved in restaging the play Toured Scotland No major reaction, except “poverty still generates violence” Was the controversy over? - Boyle’s old - living abroad? Hardman Revival 2011
Observations & Interpretations • No other modern Scottish criminal changed so dramatically or publicly or got debated in so many media for so long (tho’ he was not a BSU one-off) • Broke the mould/defied the engrained cultural narrative that said violent Scottish criminals don’t/can’t change - or die, become drunks or rot in jail • Crucial penal debates were refracted thro’ him - personalised in popular culture • The lad o’pairts - Jimmy Read and Billy Connolly working class men made good - The Scots arts community put Boyle “up” with them • The “democratic intellect” - all voices matter
There is a vast true crime industry in Scotland - focused on - tho’ not exclusive to - Glasgow Boyle has figured in it - but less and less - old images BSU - “so successful they closed it down” (Robert Jeffrey” Still no official history of BSU - uniquely it is known more thro’ convict than official voices Scottish True Crime/Histories
Some of the old penal debates are officially more settled now There is no “need” for another Boyle - point proven - “desistance” is policy (belatedly) Desistance is not necessarily rehabilitation Public/media appetite for violent redemption remains True crime has discredited serious prison literature? True Crime - cynical & popular
Joyce Laing, Christopher Carrell, Jimmy Boyle and Tom McGrath for the pictures. Thank you mike.nellis@strath.ac.uk Acknowledgements