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{{Short description|English writer}} | |||
{{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see ] --> | |||
{{distinguish|Julie Bindel}} | |||
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{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see ] --> | |||
| name = Julie Burchill | | name = Julie Burchill | ||
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1959|7|3|df=y}}<ref name=arlidge /> | ||
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| birth_place = ], England | ||
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| occupation = |
| occupation = {{Hlist|Novelist|columnist|broadcaster}} | ||
| period = 1976–present | |||
| nationality = English | |||
| module = {{Listen| embed=yes |filename = Julie burchill bbc radio4 desert island discs 10 02 2013 b01qhd0p.flac |title = Julie Burchill's voice |type = speech |description = from the BBC programme '']'', 10 February 2013.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Julie Burchill |series=] |url=http://bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01qhd0p |station=] |date=10 February 2013 |access-date=18 January 2014 |archive-date=2 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202145022/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01qhd0p |url-status=live }}</ref> }} | |||
| period = 1976-present | |||
| spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|]|1979|1984|end=div}}|{{marriage|]|1985|1992|end=div}}|{{marriage|Daniel Raven|2004}}}} | |||
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| children = 2 | ||
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'''Julie Burchill''' (born 3 July 1959, ], ]) is an English writer and ] known for her provocative comments. Beginning as a writer for the '']'' at the age of 17, she has written for newspapers such as '']'' and '']''. She is a self-declared "militant feminist".<ref name=guardian130509>'']'', 13 May 2009, </ref> She has several times been involved in legal action resulting from her work. She is also an author and novelist, her 1989 novel ''Ambition'' being a bestseller, and her 2004 novel '']'' being adapted for television. | |||
'''Julie Burchill''' (born 3 July 1959) is an English writer. Beginning as a staff writer at the '']'' at the age of 17, she has since contributed to newspapers such as '']'', '']'' and '']''. Her writing, which was described by John Arlidge in '']'' in 2002 as "outrageously outspoken" and "usually offensive,"<ref name=arlidge /> has been the subject of legal action. Burchill is also a novelist, and her 2004 novel '']'' was adapted for television. | |||
==Personal life== | |||
Julie Burchill was born in ], England to ] parents. "Her father was a Communist union activist who worked in a distillery. Her mother had a job in a cardboard box factory."<ref name=ind110600>], '']'', 11 June 2000, </ref> She did not attend university, leaving the ]s she had started a few weeks earlier to begin writing for the '']'' (NME).<ref name=jc080808/> | |||
==Early life and education== | |||
Burchill was briefly married to ] (whom she met at NME), moving in with him in 1981, at age 21.<ref name=spost/> She left three years later, leaving behind a son, and subsequently there has been "a steady stream of vitriol in both directions";<ref name=spost>'']'', 25 August 2002, </ref> she claims to have got through the "sexual side" of their marriage "by pretending that my husband was my friend ]".<ref name="Burchill1959">Julie Burchill ''The Guardian'', 17 June 2000. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> Her relationships, particularly with Parsons, have featured regularly in her work; Parsons later wrote that "It's like having a stalker. I don't understand her fascination with someone whom she split up with 15 years ago."<ref name=spost/> | |||
Julie Burchill was born in ] and educated at ].<ref>Third Way Magazine, September 2007</ref> Her father was a ] union activist who worked in a distillery. Her mother had a job in a cardboard box factory.<ref name=ind110600>], '']'', 11 June 2000, </ref> In 2010, Burchill wrote of her parents: "I don't care much for families. I adored my mum and dad, but to be honest I don't miss them much now they're dead";<ref name=ind301210>{{cite news|work=The Independent|date=30 December 2010|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/julie-burchill/julie-burchill-no-wonder-the-nuclear-family-goes-into-meltdown-after-christmas-2171631.html|first=Julie|last=Burchill|title=No wonder the nuclear family goes into meltdown after Christmas|access-date=31 December 2010|location=London|archive-date=31 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231190908/http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/julie-burchill/julie-burchill-no-wonder-the-nuclear-family-goes-into-meltdown-after-christmas-2171631.html|url-status=live}}</ref> three years later she contradicted this when she said she couldn't return to Bristol, as every time she heard someone speaking with her parents' Bristol accent it would remind her how much she missed them.<ref>{{cite web|title=Desert Island Discs|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01qhd0p|publisher=BBC|access-date=10 February 2013|date=10 February 2013|archive-date=13 February 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130213064952/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01qhd0p|url-status=live}}</ref> She did not attend university, leaving the ]s she had started a few weeks earlier to begin writing for the '']'' (NME).<ref name=jc080808 /> | |||
==Writing and broadcasting career== | |||
After Parsons, Burchill married ], the son of ] and Jay Landesman, with whom she also had a son. The sons from her marriages with Parsons and Landesman lived with their fathers after the separations. After splitting from Landesman in 1992, she subsequently married again, to her former lover ]'s brother Daniel Raven, about 13 years her junior.<ref name="Barber"/> She wrote of the joys of having a "toyboy" in her ''Times'' "Weekend Review" column. Fellow NME journalist/author ] wrote about their friendship in his book ''I'm A Journalist...Get Me Out Of Here''. She has written about her ] relationships, and declared that "I would never describe myself as 'heterosexual', 'straight' or anything else. Especially not 'bisexual' (it sounds like a sort of communal vehicle missing a mudguard). I like 'spontaneous' as a sexual description."<ref name=guardian130509/> However in 2009 she said that she was only attracted to girls in their 20s, and since she was now nearly 50, "I really don't want to be an old perv. So best leave it."<ref name=guardian130509/> | |||
===At the ''NME''=== | |||
She began her writing career at the '']'' (''NME'') in 1976, aged 17, after responding (coincidentally with her future husband ]) to an advert in that paper seeking "hip young ]s" to write about the then emerging ]. She gained the job by submitting a "]" of ]'s '']''.<ref>'']'', 15 June 2003, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170118090539/https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2003/jun/15/features.magazine37 |date=18 January 2017 }}</ref> She later wrote that at the time she only liked ], and said: "When I actually heard a punk record, I thought, 'Oh my Lord! This is not music, this is just shouting'." Indeed, she managed to decry the first self-released punk album in the UK, ]' '']'' featuring ]: "Apple-cheeked Ade has a complexion that would turn a Devon milkmaid green with envy."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Burchill |first=Julie |date=October 1977 |title=The Outsiders – ''Calling on Youth'' |journal=] |url=http://www.brittleheaven.com/index.php?section=2&category=&page=4&id=250 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604014223/http://www.brittleheaven.com/index.php?section=2&category=&page=4&id=250 |archive-date=4 June 2011 |access-date=4 April 2015}}</ref> Fortunately for her, as she later said, "Punk was over in two years. That was the only damn good thing about it."<ref name=jc080808 /> She left her position at the ''NME'' at the age of 20, and started freelancing to be able to write about other subjects, although she has never completely given up writing about pop music.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Frost|first1=Caroline|title=Julie Burchill: The Brighton Belle|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/uk/2000/newsmakers/2045348.stm|publisher=BBC|access-date=9 December 2015|date=14 June 2002|archive-date=22 September 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080922221520/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/uk/2000/newsmakers/2045348.stm|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===1980s=== | |||
Burchill has spoken repeatedly and frankly of her relationship with ], writing that she had "put enough ] up my admittedly sizeable snout to stun the entire ]n armed forces".<ref name=spost/> She declared that "As one who suffered from chronic shyness and a low boredom threshold ... I simply can't imagine that I could have ever had any kind of social life without , let alone have reigned as Queen of the ] for a good part of the '80s and '90s."<ref name=spost/> | |||
Her main employers after the ''NME'' were '']'' and '']'', where she wrote about politics, pop, fashion and society, and was their film critic from 1984 to 1986.<ref name="Dowell" /> She admitted in 2008 to making up film reviews and having "skived" from screenings,<ref name="Dowell" /> and her ex-husband, ], has admitted to attending screenings on her behalf.<ref>Cosmo Landesman {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230120123434/https://www.the-tls.co.uk/ |date=20 January 2023 }}, ''The Sunday Times'', 12 October 2008, extrcted from Landesman's book, ''Starstruck: Fame, Failure, My Family and Me''. Retrieved 4 November 2008.</ref> | |||
During the ] in 1982, Burchill argued that the military dictatorship of ] represented a greater evil. She wrote articles favourable to ]. Her sympathy for Thatcher helped in gaining a column for '']'', where in 1987 she went against the paper's usual political line by urging its readers to vote Labour. Though she claims to like the ''MoS'', she said of journalists on the '']'' in 2008: "Everybody knows that hacks are the biggest bunch of adulterers, the most misbehaving profession in the world – and you have people writing for the ''Daily Mail'' writing as though they are vicars ... moralising on single mothers and whatnot."<ref name="Dowell" /> | |||
In 1999, Burchill 'found God', and became a ]<ref name="Barber"/> and later a "self-confessed ]".<ref name=guardian190609>'']'', 19 June 2009, </ref> In June 2007, she announced that she would undertake a theology degree,<ref name=guardian210607/> although she subsequently decided to do voluntary work instead as a way to learn more about Christianity.<ref name=guardian130509/> She has volunteered in a local ] home.<ref name=jc080808/> In June 2009 '']'' reported that she had become a Friend of Brighton and Hove Progressive Synagogue and was considering again a conversion to Judaism.<ref name=thejc>Cecily Woolf ''The Jewish Chronicle'', 18 June 2009</ref> Reported as having attended ] services for a month, and studying Hebrew, Burchill now described herself as an "ex-christian", pointing out that she had been pondering on her conversion since the age of 25.<ref name=thejc/> Burchill said that "At a time of rising and increasingly vicious anti-semitism from both left and right, becoming Jewish especially appeals to me. ... Added to the fact that I admire Israel so much, it does seem to make sense – assuming of course that the Jews will have me."<ref name=guardian190609/> | |||
===Into the 1990s=== | |||
She has lived in ] since 1995 and a book on her adopted home town titled ''Made In Brighton'' (Virgin Books) was published in April 2007. Her house in Hove was sold (and demolished for redevelopment as high-density flats) around 2005 for £1.5 million,<ref>Mark Simpson ''The Independent on Sunday'', 27 March 2005. Retrieved on 22 June 2007.</ref> of which she has given away £300,000, citing ]: "A man who dies rich, dies shamed."<ref name=ind051007/> | |||
Burchill has spoken repeatedly and frankly of her relationship with drugs, writing that she had "put enough ] up my admittedly sizeable snout to stun the entire ]n armed forces".<ref name=spost /> She declared that "As one who suffered from chronic shyness and a low boredom threshold ... I simply can't imagine that I could have ever had any kind of social life without , let alone have reigned as Queen of the ] for a good part of the '80s and '90s."<ref name=spost /> While Burchill has frequently drawn on her personal life for her writing, her personal life has been a subject of public comment, especially during this period, when "everything about her – her marriages, her debauchery, her children – seemed to be news."<ref name=arlidge /> | |||
In 1991, Burchill, Landesman and ] established a short-lived magazine '']'' through which she met ], with whom she had a much publicised affair. " was only a lesbian for about six weeks in 1995," she said in an interview with ] in 2004,<ref name="Barber">Lynn Barber {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309180642/http://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/aug/22/fiction.features5 |date=9 March 2016 }}, ''The Observer'', 22 August 2004. Retrieved 3 August 2008.</ref> or "my very enjoyable six months of lesbianism" in a 2000 article.<ref name="Burchill170600">Julie Burchill {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160310015648/http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2000/jun/17/weekend.julieburchill |date=10 March 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 17 June 2000. Retrieved 3 August 2008.</ref> Launched under the slogan "Low culture for high brows", the magazine lasted until 1995, when Burchill and her colleagues fell out. It was briefly revived by Burchill, with Raven editing, in 1997. The "Fax war"<ref>Christina Patterson {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150821074615/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/camille-paglia--i-dont-get-along-with-lesbians-at-all-they-dont-like-me-and-i-dont-like-them-8076611.html |date=21 August 2015 }}, ''The Independent'', 25 August 2012</ref> in 1993 between Burchill and author ], published in the ''Modern Review'',<ref>Tara Brabazon {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180410211102/http://www.australianhumanitiesreview.org/archive/Issue-June-1997/brabazon.html |date=10 April 2018 }}, ''Australian Humanities Review'', June 1997</ref> gained much attention.<ref>Tanya Gold {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141024034244/http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/7986481/fights-of-the-feminists/ |date=24 October 2014 }}, ''The Spectator'', 15 September 2012.</ref> | |||
==Journalism career== | |||
===Early years=== | |||
She started her career, aged 17, as a writer at the '']'' (NME) after responding, coincidentally with her husband-to-be ], to an advert in that paper seeking "hip young gunslingers" to write about the then emerging ]. She won the job by sending in a "eulogy" of ]'s '']''.<ref>'']'', 15 June 2003, </ref> She later wrote that at the time she only liked black music, and "When I actually heard a punk record, I thought, ‘Oh my Lord! This is not music, this is just shouting'." Fortunately for her, as she later said, "Punk was over in two years. That was the only damn good thing about it."<ref name=jc080808/> | |||
In 1995, Burchill wrote a column for '']'', titled "I'm a bitch, and I'm proud", in which she argued that women should reclaim the word 'bitch,' used as a slur. She wrote: "it is the nature of these things that, in recent years, the slighted have taken steps to repossess the slight; thus, we have blacks who call each other 'nigger', pansies who call each other 'queer' and upper-class cretins who quite happily call each other 'Henry'."<ref>{{cite news| location=London| work=The Times| first=Julie | last=Burchill | title=I'm a bitch, and I'm proud| date=17 September 1995}}</ref> | |||
In her few years at the NME she was assigned the punk beat and notably wrote a review of the ]' ''Never Mind the Bollocks'' album on its release in 1977. Around this time she was briefly a member of the ] after meeting the journalist ].<ref>Ben Granger , SpikedMagazine.com, June 2005. Retrieved on 18 August 2008.</ref> She left her position at the NME at the age of 20, saying that writing about music should be a young person's game.{{Citation needed|date=January 2009}} She then started freelancing to be able to write about other subjects, although she has never completely given up writing about pop music. | |||
In 1996, the actor, author, playwright and theatre director ] won a ] against Burchill in respect of one of her articles, published in the '']'' newspaper, which included comments suggesting that he was "hideously ugly". The judge ruled that Burchill's actions "held him to ridicule and contempt."<ref name=LunneyOliphant>{{cite book|author=Mark Lunney and Ken Oliphant|title=Tort Law: Text and Materials|location=London and New York|publisher=]|edition=3rd|year=2007|isbn=978-0-19-921136-4|page=704}}</ref> The late 1990s were a turbulent period for Burchill as she has recalled: | |||
===1980s=== | |||
{{Blockquote| text=I got the heave-ho from my cushy billet at the '']'', where I later learned my nickname had been "]" because my best friend – briefly the editor – had appointed me. For the first time in my brilliant career, no one wanted to hire me. Somehow I limped into a column on the doddering '']'' – and then I got the boot from there, too! Surely I had reached the mythical rock bottom at last?<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/dec/27/editor-didnt-worry-breaking-conventions-deborah-orr-remembered|title=As an editor, she didn't worry about breaking conventions': Deborah Orr remembered|date=28 December 2019|work=The Guardian|access-date=28 December 2019|archive-date=28 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191228024233/https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/dec/27/editor-didnt-worry-breaking-conventions-deborah-orr-remembered|url-status=live}}</ref>}} | |||
Her main employers after the '']'' were '']'' and '']'' where she wrote about politics, pop, fashion and society, and was their film critic from 1984-86.<ref name="Dowell"/> She now admits to making up film reviews and "'skived'" from screenings,<ref name="Dowell"/> while her ex-husband, Cosmo Landesman, has admitted attending screenings on her behalf.<ref>Cosmo Landesman ''The Sunday Times'', 12 October 2008, extrcted from Landesman's book, ''Starstruck: Fame, Failure, My Family and Me''. Retrieved on 4 November 2008.</ref> | |||
===From 2000 to 2004=== | |||
One of her most controversial opinions from her early freelance career concerned the ] in 1982. The left generally condemned it as an imperialist war {{Citation needed|date=June 2007}}, but Burchill, in common with ], argued that the military dictatorship of General ] represented a greater evil. She confounded the left again, and won many admirers on the right, by writing articles favourable to ]. Her sympathy for Thatcher helped in gaining a column for '']'', where in 1987 she went against the paper's usual political line by urging its readers to vote Labour. Though she claims to like the ''MoS'', she said of journalists on the '']'' in 2008: "Everybody knows that hacks are the biggest bunch of adulterers, the most misbehaving profession in the world – and you have people writing for the ''Daily Mail'' writing as though they are vicars ... moralising on single mothers and whatnot."<ref name="Dowell"/> | |||
A user of ],<ref name="DOrr">{{cite news|last=Orr|first=Deborah|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/deborah-orr/drugs-more-drugs-and-burchill-714574.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091129074654/http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/deborah-orr/drugs-more-drugs-and-burchill-714574.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=29 November 2009|title=Drugs, more drugs and Burchill|work=The Independent|date=8 June 2000|access-date=3 August 2008}}</ref> sharing in the activity in the company of ] among others, she was positive about her use in ''The Guardian'' in 2000 when defending actress ] for Westbrook's loss of her ] because of cocaine use.<ref name="Burchillx">{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=https://www.theguardian.com/drugs/Story/0,2763,328605,00.html|title=You're going to die, so you might as well live|work=The Guardian|date=6 June 2000|access-date=3 August 2008|archive-date=21 August 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140821162506/http://www.theguardian.com/drugs/Story/0,2763,328605,00.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Journalist ], who was then married to Self, was scathing in '']'' of Burchill and her article: "She does not identify herself as a cocaine addict, so she has no pity for Ms Westbrook."<ref name="DOrr" /> In revenge for Deborah Orr's article, Burchill invented a supposedly long-standing crush on Will Self with the intention of upsetting Orr.<ref name="Burchill170600" /><ref>In a later brief item published elsewhere, Burchill admitted: "I have never in my life fancied Will Self." See {{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/4252940/Julies-fantasy.html|title=Julie's Fantasy|work=The Telegraph|date=11 July 2000|access-date=24 March 2021|archive-date=13 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220113113436/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/4252940/Julies-fantasy.html|url-status=live}}</ref> A letter in ''The Independent'' in June 2000 from the head waitress at the Groucho Club at the time, Deborah Bosley, caused a minor stir. Responding to an article by ],<ref name="Roberts">{{cite news|last=Roberts|first=Yvonne|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/julie-burchill-not-so-much-journalist-as-court-jester-714277.html|title=Not so much journalist as court jester|work=The Independent|date=12 June 2000}}{{dead link|date=August 2021|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Bosley, at the time the partner of ], a long standing critic of Burchill, stated that Burchill was merely "a fat bird in a blue mac sitting in the corner" when ensconced at the Groucho.<ref>{{cite news|last=Bosley|first=Deborah|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-5071550.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20140226231135/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-5071550.html|title=Letter: Sad fatty in blue|work=The Independent|date=18 June 2000|via=] website|archive-date=26 February 2014}}</ref> | |||
The following year's ''Burchill on Beckham'' (2001), a short book about Burchill's opinions concerning ]'s life, career, and relationship with ], attracted "some of the worst notices since Jeffrey Archer's heyday. 'Burchill is to football writing what ] is to feminist polemics'," wrote one reviewer.<ref name=spost /> According to ] in the '']'': "The book fits in with Burchill's theme of praising the working class; Burchill presents Beckham as an anti-laddish symbol of old working-class values – he reminds her of those proud men of her childhood, 'paragons of generosity, industry and chastity'."<ref>{{cite news|last=Winder|first=Robert|url=https://www.newstatesman.com/node/154574|title=Golden balls. Robert Winder on a hymn to Becks: a misunderstood victim and paragon of working-class values|work=New Statesman|date=19 November 2001|access-date=18 November 2017|archive-date=1 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201033911/https://www.newstatesman.com/node/154574|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===Into the 1990s=== | |||
In the 1980s and early 1990s, before her move to Brighton, Burchill was depicted and saw herself<ref name="Burchillx">Julie Burchill ''The Guardian'', 6 June 2000. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> as being the "Queen of the ]".<ref name="Roberts">Yvonne Roberts ''The Independent'' 12 June 2000.</ref> A user of ] at the time and since,<ref name="DOrr">Deborah Orr ''The Independent'', 8 June 2000. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> sharing in the activity in the company of ] among others, she was totally positive about her use in ''The Guardian'' when defending actress ] for the loss of her ] through her own cocaine use.<ref name="Burchillx"/> ] in '']'' was scathing of Burchill for the article: "She does not identify herself as a cocaine addict, so she has no pity for Ms Westbrook."<ref name="DOrr"/> A letter in '']'' in June 2000 from the head waitress at the Groucho Club at the time, Deborah Bosley, caused a minor stir. Responding to an article by ],<ref name="Roberts"/> Bosley, by then the partner of ], a long standing critic of Burchill, alleged that Burchill was merely "a fat bird in a blue mac sitting in the corner" when esconced at the Groucho.<ref>Deborah Bosley ''The Independent'', 18 June 2000 as reproduced on the ''Find Articles'' website. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> Her novel ''Ambition'' (1989), however, was a bestseller. | |||
For five years until 2003, Burchill wrote a weekly column in '']''. Appointed in 1998 by Orr, while editor of the ''Guardian Weekend'' supplement, Burchill's career was in trouble; she had been sacked by the revived '']'' magazine. Burchill frequently thanked Deborah Orr for rescuing her.<ref name="Self1" /> One of the pieces she wrote for ''The Guardian'' was in reaction to the murder of BBC TV presenter ] in 1999. She compared the shock of Dando's murder to finding a "tarantula in a ] full of strawberries". In 2002 she narrowly escaped prosecution for ], "following a ''Guardian'' column where she described Ireland as being synonymous with child molestation, Nazi-sympathising, and the oppression of women".<ref name=spost>O'Brien, Jonathan , '']'' (Wayback Machine Internet Archive), 25 August 2002.</ref> Burchill had expressed ] several times throughout her career, announcing in the London journal '']'' that "I hate the Irish, I think they're appalling".<ref>Shapero, Lindsay, "Red devil", ''Time Out'', 17–23 May 1984, p. 27.</ref> | |||
In 1991, Burchill, Landesman and ] established a short-lived magazine '']'' through which she met ], with whom she had a much publicised affair. Burchill "was only a lesbian for about six weeks in 1995" she claimed in an interview with ] in 2004,<ref name="Barber">Lynn Barber ''The Observer'', 22 August 2004. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> or "my very enjoyable six months of lesbianism" in a 2000 article.<ref name="Burchill1959"/> Launched under the slogan "Low culture for high brows", the magazine lasted until 1995, when Burchill and her colleagues fell out. It was briefly revived by Burchill, with Raven editing, in 1997. | |||
She supported the ], writing in ''The Guardian'' in 2003 that she was "in favour of a smaller war now rather than a far worse war later", and criticised those opposed to the war as "pro-Saddam apologists". She justified her stance by stating that "this war is about freedom, justice – and oil" and that because Britain and the United States sold weapons to Iraq that, "it is our responsibility to redress our greed and ignorance by doing the lion's share in getting rid of him".<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/feb/01/iraq.comment |title=Why we should go to war |location=London |date=1 February 2003 |work=The Guardian |first=Julie |last=Burchill |access-date=12 December 2016 |archive-date=12 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160312082719/http://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/feb/01/iraq.comment |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
===2000s=== | |||
For five years until 2003 Burchill wrote a weekly column in '']''. Appointed in 1998 by Orr, while editor of the ''Guardian Weekend'' supplement, Burchill's career was in trouble; she had been sacked by the revived '']'' magazine. Burchill frequently thanks Orr for rescuing her.<ref name="Self1"/> One of the pieces she wrote for ''The Guardian'' was in reaction to the murder of BBC TV presenter ] in 1999. She compared the shock of Dando's murder to finding a "tarantula in a punnet full of strawberries". In 2002 she narrowly escaped prosecution for ], "following a Guardian column where she described Ireland as being synonymous with child molestation, Nazi-sympathising, and the oppression of women."<ref name=spost/> | |||
Burchill left ''The Guardian'' acrimoniously, saying in an interview that they had offered her a sofa in lieu of a pay rise.<ref name="Barber" /> She |
Burchill left ''The Guardian'' acrimoniously, saying in an interview that they had offered her a sofa in lieu of a pay rise.<ref name="Barber" /> She stated that she left the newspaper in protest at what she saw as its "vile ]".<ref>{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.4861430|title=Bleeding-heart ignoramuses|work=]|date=11 August 2006|access-date=24 March 2021|archive-date=14 December 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201214092349/https://www.haaretz.com/1.4861430|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
===From 2005 to 2009=== | |||
She moved to '']'', who were more willing to meet her demands, doubling her previous salary at the ''Guardian''.<ref>'']'', 21 February 2005, </ref> Shortly after starting her weekly column, she referred to ], but appeared to confuse him with former MP ], reporting the misdeeds of Brown as those of Galloway, "he incited Arabs to fight British troops in Iraq".<ref>Owen Gibson ''The Guardian'', 16 March 2004. Retrieved on 23 June 2007.</ref> Galloway threatened legal action which was averted when she apologised and ''The Times'' paid damages. | |||
Burchill was an early critic of the fashion for denigrating lower social classes as "]s". In 2005, she presented the ] documentary ''In Defence of Chavs''. "Picking on people worse off than you are isn't humour. It's pathetic, it's cowardly and it's bullying," she commented in an interview for '']'' at the time. "It's all to do with self-loathing. ... The middle classes can't bear to see people having more fun, so they attack Chavs for things like their cheap jewellery. It's jealousy, because they secretly know Chavs are better than them. They're even better looking."<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/3637660/Dead-common-and-proud-of-it.html |location=London |work=The Daily Telegraph |first=Emily |last=Bearn |title=Dead common and proud of it |date=22 February 2005 |access-date=3 April 2018 |archive-date=15 February 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180215074028/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/3637660/Dead-common-and-proud-of-it.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Following her departure from ''The Guardian'', in early 2005 she moved to '']'', who were more willing to meet her demands, doubling her previous salary.<ref>'']'', 21 February 2005, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180207223709/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/julie-burchill-me-and-my-big-mouth-484220.html |date=7 February 2018 }}</ref> Shortly after starting her weekly column, she referred to ], but appeared to confuse him with former MP ], reporting the misdeeds of Brown as those of Galloway, "he incited Arabs to fight British troops in Iraq."<ref>Owen Gibson {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051109184624/http://politics.guardian.co.uk/media/story/0,12123,1170342,00.html |date=9 November 2005 }}, ''The Guardian'', 16 March 2004. Retrieved 23 June 2007.</ref> She apologised in her column<ref>{{cite news |last=Smith |first=David |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2004/nov/21/iraq.pressandpublishing |title=The Observer Profile: George Galloway | Media |work=] |publisher=Guardian |date=21 November 2004 |access-date=4 April 2012 |location=London |archive-date=28 August 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130828163600/http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2004/nov/21/iraq.pressandpublishing |url-status=live }}</ref> and ''The Times'' paid damages thought to have been £50,000.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150214174957/http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/gorgeous-george-has-his-day-in-court-1-518556 |date=14 February 2015 }}, ''The Scotsman'', 19 March 2004</ref> | |||
In 2006 '']'' dropped her Saturday column, and arranged a more flexible arrangement with Burchill writing for the daily paper.<ref>Stephen Brook ''The Guardian'', 9 February 2006. Retrieved on 23 June 2007.</ref> Later it emerged during a ''Guardian'' interview, published on 4 August 2008,<ref name="Dowell">Ben Dowell , ''The Guardian'', 4 August 2008.</ref> that eventually she "was given the jolly old heave ho" by ''The Times'', and paid off for the last year of her three year contract, still receiving the £300,000 she would have earned if she had been obliged to provide copy.<ref name="Dowell"/> She later described her columns for her abbreviated ''Times'' contract, which ended abruptly in 2007, thus: "I was totally taking the piss. I didn't spend much time on them and they were such arrant crap."<ref name="Dowell"/> | |||
In 2006, '']'' dropped her Saturday column, and arranged a more flexible arrangement with Burchill writing for the daily paper.<ref>Stephen Brook {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060220054742/http://media.guardian.co.uk/site/story/0,,1705622,00.html |date=20 February 2006 }}, ''The Guardian'', 9 February 2006. Retrieved 23 June 2007.</ref> Later it emerged, during a ''Guardian'' interview published on 4 August 2008,<ref name="Dowell">Ben Dowell {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161202023233/https://www.theguardian.com/media/2008/aug/04/pressandpublishing1 |date=2 December 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 4 August 2008.</ref> that eventually she "was given the jolly old heave ho" by ''The Times'', and paid off for the last year of her three-year contract, still receiving the £300,000 she would have earned if she had been obliged to provide copy.<ref name="Dowell" /> She later described her columns for her abbreviated ''Times'' contract, which ended abruptly in 2007, thus: "I was totally taking the piss. I didn't spend much time on them and they were such arrant crap."<ref name="Dowell" /> | |||
In February 2006, she announced plans for a year's sabbatical from journalism, planning, among other things, to study ]. She had previously, in 1999, 'found God', and become a ].<ref name="Barber"/> In June 2007, she announced that she would not be returning to journalism, but instead concentrate on writing books and TV scripts and finally undertake a theology degree,<ref name=guardian210607>Stephen Brook ''The Guardian'', 21 June 2007. Retrieved on 23 June 2007.</ref> but she returned to writing for '']'' newspaper.<ref>Julie Burchill ''The Guardian'', 19 December 2007. Retrieved on 20 December 2007.</ref> | |||
In February 2006, she announced plans for a year's sabbatical from journalism, planning, among other things, to study ]. In June 2007, she announced that she would not be returning to journalism, but instead concentrate on writing books and TV scripts and finally undertake a theology degree,<ref name=guardian210607>Stephen Brook {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070626125634/http://media.guardian.co.uk/site/story/0,,2107536,00.html |date=26 June 2007 }}, ''The Guardian'', 21 June 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2007.</ref> but she returned to writing for '']'' newspaper.<ref>Julie Burchill {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071220173912/http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/julie_burchill/2007/12/why_i_love_tesco.html |date=20 December 2007 }}, ''The Guardian'', 19 December 2007. Retrieved 20 December 2007.</ref> | |||
Besides writing occasional pieces for '']'', she wrote four articles for the new, centre-right politics and culture magazine '']'' between July and October 2008. | |||
Burchill's co-written book with ], ''Not in My Name: A Compendium of Modern Hypocrisy'', appeared in August 2008, and is dedicated "to Arik and Bibi" (] and ]). According to ], writing for '']'' in 2008, "this book does not merely stand up for Israel, it jumps up and down, cheers and waves its arms".<ref name=jc080808>Gerald Jacobs {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081119144604/http://thejc.com/articles/julie-burchill-brash-outspoken-and-wishing-she-was-jewish |date=19 November 2008 }}, ''The Jewish Chronicle'', 8 August 2008</ref> The newspaper described her as "Israel's staunchest supporter in the UK media". When asked if Israel has any flaws, she responded: "Yes. They are much too tolerant of their freaking neighbours, much too reasonable".<ref name=jc080808 /> | |||
She describes herself as being in "cheerful semi-retirement", partly because of waning ambition.<ref name=scotsun08/> However, at the end of June 2010 it was announced Burchill would be writing exclusively for '']'',<ref>Mark Sweney , ''The Guardian'', 30 June 2010</ref> contributing a weekly full-page column for the paper. | |||
She declared in 2005, after ]'s withdrawal of Israeli settlers from the ], that "Israel is the only country I would fucking die for. He's the enemy of the Jews. Chucking his own people off the Gaza; to me that's disgusting".<ref>Granger, Ben, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051201161934/http://www.spikemagazine.com/0605-julie-burchill.php |date=1 December 2005 }}, ''Spike'' magazine, June 2005.</ref> Besides writing occasional pieces for ''The Guardian'', she wrote four articles for the centre-right politics and culture magazine '']'' between July and October 2008. | |||
==Books and television== | |||
Burchill is an author and novelist, her 1989 novel ''Ambition'' being a bestseller. Her 2004 ]-themed novel for teenagers '']'' was produced by ] and aired on ].<ref>, Shine: News, 2005. Retrieved on 23 June 2007.</ref> ]'s portrayal of the central character Maria Sweet inspired the 2007 sequel novel ''Sweet''.<ref name=ind051007>'']'', 5 October 2007, </ref> She has made television documentaries about the death of her father from ] in 2002 (]) and '']'' magazine broadcast on ] in 2006. | |||
===2010s=== | |||
Less successfully, 2001's ''Burchill on Beckham'', a short book about Burchill's views of ]'s life, career, and relationship with ], attracted | |||
At the end of June 2010 it was announced Burchill would be writing exclusively for ''The Independent'',<ref>Mark Sweney {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160308010126/http://www.theguardian.com/media/2010/jun/30/julie-burchill-joins-the-independent |date=8 March 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 30 June 2010</ref> contributing a weekly full-page column for the paper. The connection lasted less than 18 months. Burchill wrote her last column for ''The Independent'' at the end of October 2011.<ref>Julie Burchill {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120712234125/http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/julie-burchill/julie-burchill-fashion-is-for-dummies-but-youre-never-too-fat-for-a-fragrance-to-fit-2376751.html |date=12 July 2012 }}, ''The Independent'', 28 October 2011; Josh Halliday {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307202310/http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/oct/28/julie-burchill-leaves-independent |date=7 March 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 28 October 2011.</ref> Admitting he had tried to recruit Burchill for '']'' in the 1980s, ] commented: "my admittedly occasional reading of her columns in recent years has left feeling that she realises her old schtick is no longer working. She has run out of steam – and sympathetic newspaper editors".<ref>Roy Greenslade {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160310021826/http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2011/oct/28/theindependent-chris-blackhurst?CMP=twt_fd |date=10 March 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 28 October 2011</ref> | |||
"some of the worst notices since Jeffrey Archer's heyday. 'Burchill is to football writing what Jimmy Hill is to feminist polemics,' carped one reviewer, not unfairly."<ref name=spost/> The book fits in with Burchill's theme of praising the working class; Burchill presents Beckham as "an anti-laddish symbol of old working-class values – he reminds her of those proud men of her childhood, 'paragons of generosity, industry and chastity'."<ref>Robert Winder, '']'', 19 November 2001, </ref> | |||
Commenting on the ], Burchill wrote in ''The Independent'': "It would be wonderful to think that what replaces Mubarak will be better. But here's the thing about Middle Eastern regimes: they're all vile. The ones that are 'friendly' are vile and the ones that hate us are vile. Revolutions in the region have a habit of going horribly wrong, and this may well have something to do with the fact that Islam and democracy appear to find it difficult to co-exist for long."<ref>{{cite news|title=Julie Burchill: Armchair revolutionaries: be careful what you wish for in the Middle East|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/julie-burchill/julie-burchill-armchair-revolutionaries-be-careful-what-you-wish-for-in-the-middle-east-2202457.html|access-date=3 February 2011|work=The Independent|date=3 February 2011|location=London|archive-date=4 February 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110204050537/http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/julie-burchill/julie-burchill-armchair-revolutionaries-be-careful-what-you-wish-for-in-the-middle-east-2202457.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Burchill's co-written book with ] ''Not in My Name: A Compendium of Modern Hypocrisy'' appeared in August 2008. The book is dedicated "to Arik and Bibi" (] and ]); the '']'' wrote that "this book does not merely stand up for Israel, it jumps up and down, cheers and waves its arms."<ref name=jc080808/> | |||
On 13 January 2013, Burchill wrote an article for '']'' defending ] after a reference by Moore to transsexuals had been greeted with a great deal of criticism. In Burchill's view, it showed the "]" of transsexuals to have their "cock cut off and then plead special privileges as women".<ref>{{cite news|first=Julie | |||
==Views and reputation== | |||
|last=Burchill|date=13 January 2013|title=Transsexuals should cut it out|work=The Observer}}</ref> There were a number of objections to her writing from members of the transgender community and non-transgender community alike.<ref>{{cite news|last=Kaveney|first=Roz|title=Julie Burchill has ended up bullying the trans community|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/13/julie-birchill-bullying-trans-community?intcmp=239|work=The Guardian|access-date=13 January 2013|location=London|date=13 January 2013|archive-date=8 January 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140108025509/http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/13/julie-birchill-bullying-trans-community?intcmp=239|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Pearce|first=Ruth|title=Transphobia in The Guardian: no excuse for hate speech|url=http://www.lesbilicious.co.uk/transphobia-in-the-guardian-no-excuse-for-hate-speech/|publisher=Lesbilicious|access-date=13 January 2013|archive-date=16 January 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130116052204/http://www.lesbilicious.co.uk/transphobia-in-the-guardian-no-excuse-for-hate-speech/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The editor of ''The Observer'', ], responded on the comments page to what he described as "many emails protesting about this piece" and stated that he would be looking into the issue.<ref>{{cite news|last=Pritchard|first=Stephen|title=Reply in comments|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/13/julie-burchill-suzanne-moore-transsexuals?mobile-redirect=false#comment-20580194|work=The Observer|access-date=13 January 2013|location=London|date=14 January 2013}}</ref> ] MP ], formerly a ], called for the dismissal of Burchill and Mulholland in response to the piece.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/9799113/Lynne-Featherstone-calls-for-Observers-Julie-Burchill-to-be-sacked-following-disgusting-rant-against-transsexuals.html|title=Lynne Featherstone calls for Observer's Julie Burchill to be sacked following 'disgusting rant' against transsexuals|first=Alice|last=Philipson|date=13 January 2013|work=The Telegraph|location=London|access-date=3 April 2018|archive-date=14 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130514120449/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/9799113/Lynne-Featherstone-calls-for-Observers-Julie-Burchill-to-be-sacked-following-disgusting-rant-against-transsexuals.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The article was withdrawn from the website the following day and replaced with a message from Mulholland,<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170108004502/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/14/1 |date=8 January 2017 }}, ''Observer/Guardian'' website, 14 January 2013</ref> but reappeared on the ''Telegraph'' website.<ref>Toby Young (sic) , ''Telegraph'', 14 January 2013. See also Toby Young , ''The Telegraph'', 14 January 2013</ref> On 18 January, ''The Observer''{{'}}s Readers Editor Stephen Pritchard defended the decision to remove the article from the newspaper's website, quoting the editor who took that decision as saying "This clearly fell outside what we might consider reasonable. The piece should not have been published in that form. I don't want the ''Observer'' to be conducting debates on those terms or with that language. It was offensive, needlessly. We made a misjudgment and we apologise for that".<ref>Stephen Pritchard {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170311120832/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/18/julie-burchill-and-the-observer |date=11 March 2017 }}, ''The Guardian'', 18 January 2013</ref> | |||
Burchill is known for her contentious prose – in her own words, "the writing equivalent of screaming and throwing things"<ref name=scotsun08>'']'', 3 August 2008, </ref> – and strong opinions: for her novel ''Sugar Rush'' her publicist described her "Britain's most famous and controversial journalist".<ref>Rachel Cooke, '']'', 5 September 2004, </ref> One of her most consistent themes is her championing of the ] (which she still identifies with, despite now being a successful journalist) against the ] in most cases, and has been particularly vocal in defending ].<ref>Julie Burchill ''The Times'', 18 February 2005.</ref> According to ], "Burchill's great talent as a journalist is to beautifully articulate the inarticulate sentiments and prejudices of her readers".<ref name="Self1">Will Self ''The Independent'', 25 April 1999, as reproduced on the ''Find Articles'' website. Retrieved on 3 August 2008.</ref> For ], Burchill's "insights were, and remain, negligible, on the level of a toddler having a tantrum".<ref>cited in , BBC News, 23 February 1999. Retrieved on 5 August 2008.</ref> As John Arlidge put it in '']'', | |||
===Religion and philo-semitism=== | |||
{{quotation|If Burchill is famous for anything it is for being Julie Burchill, the brilliant, unpredictable, outrageously outspoken writer who has an iconoclastic, usually offensive, view on everything.<ref name=arlidge>John Arlidge, '']'', 9 June 2002, </ref> | |||
In her 1987 essay collection ''Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised'', Burchill criticised what she called "the ] of politicized American blacks" such as ], who had referred to ] as "Hymietown." Burchill wrote, "imagine how the blacks would have gnashed their diamond-studded teeth if a Jewish leader had publicly referred to ] as 'Nigger-town'!".<ref>Julie Burchill, ''Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised'' (London: Arrow Books, 1987), p. 92</ref> | |||
}} | |||
In 1999, Burchill said she "found God", and became a ]<ref name="Barber" /> and later a "self-confessed ]".<ref name=guardian190609>{{cite news|last=Butt|first=Riazat|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/jun/19/julie-burchill-judaism-brighton-synagogue|title=Julie Burchill moves closer to Judaism|work=The Guardian|date=19 June 2009|access-date=17 April 2021|archive-date=7 April 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220407055044/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/jun/19/julie-burchill-judaism-brighton-synagogue|url-status=live}}</ref> In June 2007, she announced that she would undertake a theology degree,<ref name=guardian210607 /> although she subsequently decided to do voluntary work instead as a way to learn more about Christianity.<ref name=guardian130509 /> | |||
Burchill has frequently drawn on her personal life for her writing, but conversely her personal life has been a subject of public comment, particularly during the late eighties and early nineties, when she was the self-declared "Queen of the Groucho Club", and "everything about her – her marriages, her debauchery, her children – seemed to be news."<ref name=arlidge/> In 1999 the '']'' ran a two-page spread with the headline "Is Julie Burchill the worst mother in Britain?", "savaging her for leaving her two sons to be raised by their fathers."<ref name=spost/> In 2002 her life was the subject of a one-woman ] play, ''Julie Burchill is Away'', by ], with Burchill played by her friend ].<ref name=arlidge/> | |||
In June 2009, '']'' reported that Burchill had become a Friend of Brighton and Hove Progressive Synagogue and was again considering a conversion to Judaism.<ref name=thejc>{{cite news|last=Woolf|first=Cecily|url=http://www.thejc.com/articles/julie-burchill-joins-brighton-shul|title=Brighton shul|work=The Jewish Chronicle|date=18 June 2009|access-date=19 June 2009|archive-date=22 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090622173859/http://www.thejc.com/articles/julie-burchill-joins-brighton-shul|url-status=live}}</ref> According to ''TheJC'', she had attended ] services for a month, and studying Hebrew, she described herself as an "ex-Christian", pointing out that she had been pondering on her conversion since the age of 25.<ref name=thejc /> Burchill said that "At a time of rising and increasingly vicious anti-semitism from both left and right, becoming Jewish especially appeals to me. ... Added to the fact that I admire Israel so much, it does seem to make sense – assuming of course that the Jews will have me".<ref name=guardian190609 /> She wrote in November 2012: "The things I love about the Jews are: their religion, their language and their ancient country".<ref name="Burchilltjc12">{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/comment/89097/why-you-are-stuck-me|title=Why you are stuck with me|work=The Jewish Chronicle|date=1 November 2012|access-date=6 November 2014|archive-date=7 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141107010145/http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/comment/89097/why-you-are-stuck-me|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In 2003, Burchill was ranked number 85 in Channel 4's poll of '']''. The poll was inspired by the BBC series '']'', though it was less serious in nature. The aim was to discover the "100 worst Britons we love to hate". The poll specified that the nominees had to be British, alive and not currently in prison or pending trial. | |||
Burchill clashed with Rabbi ] of the Brighton and Hove Progressive Synagogue, and the Rabbi's lesbian partner, Jess Woods.<ref name="Dugan">{{cite news|last=Dugan|first=Emily|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/what-did-this-lesbian-rabbi-do-to-make-julie-burchill-mad-9758896.html|title=What did this lesbian rabbi do to make Julie Burchill mad?|work=The Independent|date=26 September 2014|access-date=2 September 2017|archive-date=19 November 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171119011548/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/what-did-this-lesbian-rabbi-do-to-make-julie-burchill-mad-9758896.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Among the reasons for their differences was Rabbi Sarah's defence of Muslims and her advocacy of the Palestinian cause. In Burchill's words, the rabbi "respects PIG ISLAM".<ref name="Dugan" /> Rabbi Sarah told ''The Independent'' in September 2014: "The problem is doesn’t have any in-depth knowledge. I can imagine her endlessly watching the film '']'' with ]. She’s got a kind of Hollywood view of Jews. You know, ‘Jews are so clever, we’ve survived ...'."<ref name="Dugan" /> | |||
Burchill has made frequent attacks on various ] figures, which have attracted criticism for their cruelty, though her supporters note the self-deprecating aspects of her persona. Asked by ] in a 1999 interview if she was ], she responded with the comment: "I don't know – I didn't go to university".<ref name="Self1"/> On the 25th anniversary of John Lennon's assassination in 2005 she told the Guardian "I don't remember where I was but I was really pleased he was dead, as he was a wife-beater, gay-basher, anti-Semite and all-round bully-boy."<ref>'']'', 8 December 2005, </ref> | |||
In 2014, Burchill's ]<ref>{{cite news |last1=Burchill |first1=Julie |title=Why you are stuck with me |url=https://www.thejc.com/comment/opinion/why-you-are-stuck-with-me-1.37949 |work=The Jewish Chronicle |date=1 November 2012 |access-date=1 June 2021 |archive-date=2 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210602220034/https://www.thejc.com/comment/opinion/why-you-are-stuck-with-me-1.37949 |url-status=live }}</ref> book ''Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite'' was published. ]-based writer Akin Ajayi in '']'' thought "the reactionary ] of ''Unchosen'' is far removed from the affectionate warmness that a love of the Jewish people can be".<ref name="Ajayi">{{cite news|last=Ajayi|first=Akin|url=http://www.haaretz.com/life/books/.premium-1.623749|title=From Marily Monroe to MLK: Julie Burchill Explains 'Why I Love the Jew'|work=Haaretz|date=2 November 2014|access-date=17 April 2021|archive-date=1 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201182417/https://www.haaretz.com/life/books/.premium-1.623749|url-status=live}}</ref> Burchill's ex-husband, Cosmo Landesman, considered it to be an "exhilarating and exasperating mix of the utterly brilliant and the totally bonkers". He observes that "there are plenty of Jews Julie doesn't love" including the "millions of Jews around the world who have ever criticised Israel. Her love is blind, deaf and dumb to such an obvious contradiction".<ref>{{cite news|last=Landesman|first=Cosmno|url=http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/9360462/unchosen-by-julie-burchill-review/|title=What Julie Burchill's ex-husband thinks of her new memoir|work=The Spectator|date=6 November 2014|access-date=6 November 2014|archive-date=7 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141107172323/http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/9360462/unchosen-by-julie-burchill-review/|url-status=live}}</ref> ''Guardian'' columnist ] wrote: "Burchill divides up the chosen people into Good Jews (hardliners, Israelites) and Bad Jews (liberal Jews) with the enthusiasm of an antisemite. Hilariously, she sets herself up as the Jewishness Police, railing against Jews who are not Jewish enough".<ref>{{cite news|last=Freeman|first=Hadley|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/07/god-save-jews-from-philosemitism|title=God save us from the philosemitism of Burchill, Amis and Mensch|work=The Guardian|date=8 November 2014|access-date=17 April 2021|archive-date=23 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210423085218/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/07/god-save-jews-from-philosemitism|url-status=live}}</ref> In his review in '']'', ] described ''Unchosen'' as "occasionally touching, sometimes bigoted and sporadically hilarious" but that it "often degenerates into EDL-style abuse that lacks any redeeming wit."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kahn-Harris |first1=Keith |author-link=Keith Kahn-Harris |title=Unchosen by Julie Burchill, book review: Tribute to Jews mixes humour |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/unchosen-julie-burchill-book-review-author-s-tribute-jews-mixes-humour-passion-and-bigotry-9770345.html |work=The Independent |date=12 October 2014 |access-date=1 June 2021 |language=en |archive-date=2 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210602224342/https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/unchosen-julie-burchill-book-review-author-s-tribute-jews-mixes-humour-passion-and-bigotry-9770345.html |url-status=live }}</ref> In '']'' Will Self wrote, "I’m afraid I can’t really dignify her latest offering with the ascription 'book', nor the contents therein as 'writing' – rather they are sophomoric, hammy effusions, wrongheaded, rancorous, and pathetically self-aggrandising."<ref>{{cite news|last=Self|first=Will|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/nov/06/how-i-stopped-being-a-jew-shlomo-sand-unchosen-julie-burchill-review|title=How I Stopped Being a Jew by Shlomo Sand and Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite by Julie Burchill – review|work=The Guardian|date=6 November 2014}}</ref> | |||
Burchill has on occasions expressed concern for animal welfare. She is a supporter of the ].{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} | |||
===Other books and television programmes=== | |||
Burchill has always claimed she has never renounced the ] beliefs of her youth. She is a consistent defender of the old ].{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} | |||
Burchill has written novels and made television documentaries. Her lesbian-themed novel for teenagers '']'' (2004) was adapted into a television drama series produced by ] for ].<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061030124636/http://www.shinelimited.com/about.jsp?id=4&aid=1 |date=30 October 2006}}, Shine: News, 2005. Retrieved 23 June 2007.</ref> ]'s portrayal of the central character Maria Sweet inspired the 2007 sequel novel ''Sweet''.<ref name=ind051007>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/julie-burchill-where-a-wild-thing-went-395956.html|title=Julie Burchill: Where a wild thing went|first=Nicolette|last=Jones|newspaper=]|date=5 October 2007|access-date=2 September 2017|archive-date=11 June 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170611140339/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/julie-burchill-where-a-wild-thing-went-395956.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Burchill has made television documentaries about the death of her father from ] in 2002 (]) and '']'' magazine broadcast on ] in 2006. | |||
====''Welcome to the Woke Trials''==== | |||
A defender of ], the '']'' described her in 2008 as "Israel's staunchest supporter in the UK media"; she has two Israeli flags in her home,<ref name=jc080808>'']'', 8 August 2008, </ref> declaring in 2005, after ]'s withdrawal of Israeli settlers from the ], that "Israel is the only country I would fucking die for. He's the enemy of the Jews. Chucking his own people off the Gaza; to me that's disgusting."<ref>''Spike'' magazine, , June 2005</ref> | |||
''Welcome To The ] Trials: How #Identity Killed Progressive Politics'' was planned to be issued by Tabatha Stirling of Stirling Publishing<ref>{{Cite news|date=15 March 2021|title=Stirling Publishing, Edinburgh - Tabatha Stirling, Publishing Director|url=https://www.stirlingpublishing.co.uk/tabatha-stirling|access-date=16 March 2021|website=stirlingpublishing.co.uk}}</ref> in summer 2021 after being dropped by its original publisher following Burchill's defamatory tweets to ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Law|first=Katie|url=https://www.standard.co.uk/culture/books/julie-burchill-new-publisher-book-cancel-culture-b924167.html|title=Julie Burchill finds new publisher after book about cancel culture was cancelled, and apologises for defamatory tweets to Ash Sarkar|work=Evening Standard|location=London|date=16 March 2021|access-date=16 March 2021|archive-date=16 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316070518/https://www.standard.co.uk/culture/books/julie-burchill-new-publisher-book-cancel-culture-b924167.html|url-status=live}}</ref> On 14 March 2021, when referencing her new publisher Burchill announced that, with Stirling, "I've found someone who's JUST LIKE ME." Stirling<ref>{{Cite news|date=15 March 2021|title=From Dust and needles a memoir|url=https://www.litromagazine.com/looking-to-buy-short-stories-that-transport-look-no-further/dust-needles-memoir/|access-date=16 March 2021|work=Litro Magazine|archive-date=21 October 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211021150315/https://www.litromagazine.com/looking-to-buy-short-stories-that-transport-look-no-further/dust-needles-memoir/|url-status=live}}</ref> is alleged to have written a series of articles for ] as "Miss Britannia", describing her son's school as "a hellhole for sensible, secure White boys" and claimed "there is one member of staff who is openly gay, and I mean ] extra gay".<ref>{{Cite news|date=16 March 2021|title=Far-Right link of Julie Burchill's new publisher|url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/londoners-diary/farright-link-of-julie-burchill-s-new-publisher-imelda-may-camping-paris-arrest-b924377.html?amp|access-date=16 March 2021|work=Evening Standard|location=London|last=Smith|first=Robbie|archive-date=17 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210317101454/https://www.standard.co.uk/news/londoners-diary/farright-link-of-julie-burchill-s-new-publisher-imelda-may-camping-paris-arrest-b924377.html?amp|url-status=live}}</ref> On 16 March 2021, Burchill announced she would not publish her book with Stirling Publishing, the same day she issued a public apology for libel and harassment of Sarkar.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Cain|first=Sian|date=17 March 2021|title=Julie Burchill fires new publisher identified as a white nationalist|url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/17/julie-burchill-fires-new-publisher-identified-as-a-white-nationalist|access-date=17 March 2021|work=The Guardian|archive-date=17 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210317141945/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/17/julie-burchill-fires-new-publisher-identified-as-a-white-nationalist|url-status=live}}</ref> The book was subsequently published by ].<ref>{{cite news |last=Letts |first=Quentin |authorlink=Quentin Letts |date=19 November 2021 |title=Welcome to the Woke Trials by Julie Burchill review — giving the woke a whacking |url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/welcome-to-the-woke-trials-by-julie-burchill-review-n79m7vpqh |work=] |location=London |access-date=19 November 2021 |url-access=subscription |archive-date=19 November 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211119180651/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/welcome-to-the-woke-trials-by-julie-burchill-review-n79m7vpqh |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==Responses== | |||
She is among those British journalists who wholeheartedly supported ]. Writing in '']'' in 2003, she said: “I am in favour of a smaller war now rather than a far worse war later” and she condemned “the sheer befuddled babyishness of the pro-Saddam apologists”. She admitted the war was partly about oil but explained: “The fact is that this war is about freedom, justice – and oil. It's called multitasking. Get used to it!” She also claimed that because Britain and the United States sold the Iraqi dictator weapons, “it is our responsibility to redress our greed and ignorance by doing the lion's share in getting rid of him”. She also expressed her admiration for United States Republican politician ], whom she described as “the coolest, cleverest, most powerful black woman since ]”.<ref>{{Cite news| url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/feb/01/iraq.comment | title= Why we should go to war | location=London | date=1 February 2003 | work=The Guardian | first=Julie | last=Burchill}}</ref> | |||
Burchill has described her own style as the writing equivalent of screaming and throwing things.<ref name=scotsun08>'']'', 3 August 2008, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608201500/http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/sos-review/39I-live-the-life-of.4354542.jp |date=8 June 2011 }}</ref><ref name=guardian130509>''The Guardian'', 13 May 2009, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161202023236/https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2009/may/13/julie-bindel-burchill-feminism |date=2 December 2016 }}</ref> For her novel ''Sugar Rush'' her publicist described her as "Britain's most famous and controversial journalist".<ref>Rachel Cooke, '']'', 5 September 2004, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170902181001/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/sep/05/fiction.booksforchildrenandteenagers |date=2 September 2017 }}</ref> One of her most consistent themes is the championing of the working class against the middle class in most cases, and she has been particularly vocal in defending ']s'.<ref>Julie Burchill {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081015162621/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7-1488120,00.html |date=15 October 2008 }}, '']'', 18 February 2005.</ref> According to Will Self, "Burchill's great talent as a journalist is to beautifully articulate the inarticulate sentiments and prejudices of her readers".<ref name="Self1">{{cite news|last1=Self|first1=Will|title=Interview: The Doll Within|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/interview-the-doll-within-1089405.html|access-date=2 September 2017|work=Independent|date=24 April 1999|archive-date=2 September 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170902182833/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/interview-the-doll-within-1089405.html|url-status=live}}</ref> For ], Burchill's "insights were, and remain, negligible, on the level of a toddler having a tantrum".<ref>cited in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230120123434/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/281176.stm |date=20 January 2023 }}, BBC News, 23 February 1999. Retrieved 5 August 2008.</ref> John Arlidge wrote in '']'' in 2002: "If Burchill is famous for anything it is for being Julie Burchill, the brilliant, unpredictable, outrageously outspoken writer who has an iconoclastic, usually offensive, view on everything.<ref name=arlidge>{{cite news|last=Arlidge|first=John|url=https://www.theguardian.com/observer/comment/story/0,,729941,00.html|title=Squeaky queen|work=]|date=9 June 2002|access-date=16 March 2021|archive-date=7 April 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220407055036/https://www.theguardian.com/observer/comment/story/0,,729941,00.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In November 1980, former ] front man ] gave an interview to ] in which he referred to Burchill and Tony Parsons as "toss-bag journalists, desperately trying to get in on something" in response to their book, ''The Boy Looked at Johnny'', and described its chapter on amphetamines as "stupidity". Lydon was incensed by Burchill and Parsons attributing his talent to his alleged use of the drug in their book.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bardachreports.com/articles/int_19801100.htm|title=JohnnyLydon|website=www.bardachreports.com|access-date=19 January 2018|archive-date=19 January 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180119235814/http://www.bardachreports.com/articles/int_19801100.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
In October 1999, in an article for ''The Guardian'', she wrote: "That young men succeed in suicide more often than girls isn't really the point. Indeed, the more callous among us would say that it was quite nice for young men finally to find something that they're better at than girls".<ref name="Burchill161099">{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/oct/16/weekend7.weekend6|title=Suicide is a side-effect of affluence|work=The Guardian|date=16 October 1999|access-date=13 May 2018|archive-date=14 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180514065204/https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/oct/16/weekend7.weekend6|url-status=live}}</ref> After a previous occasion when Burchill wrote "suicides should be left to get on with it", she "received a small number of letters from people whose sons had killed themselves".<ref name="Burchill161099" /> | |||
In 2002, her life was the subject of a one-woman West End play, ''Julie Burchill is Away'', by ], with Burchill played by her friend ].<ref name=arlidge /> A sequel by Fountain, ''Julie Burchill: Absolute Cult'', followed in 2014, with ] in the central role.<ref name="Cooper12">Neil Cooper {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230120123441/https://www.heraldscotland.com/life_style/arts_ents/13173792.burchill-back-spotlight-play-shows-remains-cult-figure/ |date=20 January 2023 }}, ''The Herald'' (Glasgow), 7 August 2014</ref> | |||
In 2003, Burchill was ranked number 85 in Channel 4's poll of ''100 Worst Britons''.<ref>Evan Maloney {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080319101657/http://blogs.news.com.au/news/splat/index.php/news/comments/insulting_other_people/P20/ |date=19 March 2008}}, news.com.au, 17 November 2006</ref><ref>Helen Brown {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180713071533/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/4203438/Sorry...-was-that-rude.html |date=13 July 2018 }}, ''The Telegraph'', 31 March 2007</ref> The poll was inspired by the BBC series '']'', though it was less serious in nature. The aim was to discover the "100 worst Britons we love to hate". The poll specified that the nominees had to be British, alive and not currently in prison or pending trial. In 2005, on the 25th anniversary of the ], she told ''The Guardian'': "I don't remember where I was but I was really pleased he was dead, as he was a wife-beater, gay-basher, anti-Semite and all-round bully-boy."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160308204142/http://www.theguardian.com/music/2005/dec/08/thebeatles.popandrock |date=8 March 2016 }} ''The Guardian'', 8 December 2005</ref> In the essay "Born Again Cows" published in ''Damaged Gods'' (1987), she wrote: "When the sex war is won prostitutes should be shot as collaborators for their terrible betrayal of all women."<ref>Quoted by Hannah Betts {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309184323/http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/mar/05/hatred-prostitutes-feminists-brutality |date=9 March 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'', 5 March 2013.</ref> | |||
On 6 June 2021, and shortly after the announcement of the birth of ], the daughter of the ] and ], Burchill tweeted: "What a missed opportunity. They could have called it Georgina Floydina!”, a reference to ]. Her comments were widely condemned, with racial equality activist ] stating: "She’s (Lilibet) referred to as 'IT'. The utter disrespect & dehumanisation of #HarryandMeghan children because of their proximity to ‘Blackness’ is Racist"; actress Kelechi Okafor wrote: "Likening baby Lilibet to George Floyd is to hone in on the fact she isn't fully white...She refers to Lilbet as 'it' even though it has been announced that the baby is a girl and she could've addressed her as such...Disgusting scenes."<ref>{{cite news|last=Royston|first=Jack|title=Meghan Markle critic says couple should have called baby "Georgina Floydina"|url=https://www.newsweek.com/meghan-markle-critic-julie-burchill-couple-called-baby-lilibet-georgina-floydina-1598047|work=Newsweek|date=7 June 2021|access-date=7 June 2021|language=en|archive-date=7 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210607120143/https://www.newsweek.com/meghan-markle-critic-julie-burchill-couple-called-baby-lilibet-georgina-floydina-1598047|url-status=live}}</ref> On 8 June, via her Facebook account, Burchill announced that she had been sacked by '']''<ref>{{cite news |last1=Chao-Fong |first1=Leonie |title=Julie Burchill says she's been sacked by Telegraph after racist Lilibet tweet |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/julie-burchill-telegraph-lilibet-tweet-b1861989.html |work=The Independent |date=8 June 2021 |access-date=8 June 2021 |archive-date=8 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210608172835/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/julie-burchill-telegraph-lilibet-tweet-b1861989.html |url-status=live }}</ref> as a result of her online comments.<ref name="Times June 21">{{cite news |last1=Ames |first1=Jonathan |title=Barrister suspended after saying Sussexes should call baby Doprah |url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/barrister-suspended-after-saying-sussexes-should-call-baby-doprah-7sfjcnmfh |work=The Times |date=9 June 2021 |language=en |access-date=10 June 2021 |archive-date=10 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210610064331/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/barrister-suspended-after-saying-sussexes-should-call-baby-doprah-7sfjcnmfh |url-status=live }}{{subscription required}}</ref> | |||
===Libel=== | |||
In 2020, Burchill posted a series of defamatory tweets of Ash Sarkar, which included claims that she condones paedophilia and is supportive of Islamist terrorism.<ref name=":0">{{Cite news|last=Power|first=Ed|title=Julie Burchill: Her apology, publisher problems and history of weird ideas about Ireland|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/tv-radio-web/julie-burchill-her-apology-publisher-problems-and-history-of-weird-ideas-about-ireland-1.4514633|access-date=20 March 2021|newspaper=The Irish Times|language=en|archive-date=19 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319142743/https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/tv-radio-web/julie-burchill-her-apology-publisher-problems-and-history-of-weird-ideas-about-ireland-1.4514633|url-status=live}}</ref> Burchill called on her Facebook followers to "wade in on Twitter" against "the Islamists" and the "nonces".<ref name="Doughty Street">{{cite web|title=Julie Burchill to pay substantial damages & public apology to Sarkar in defamation/ harassment case|url=https://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/news/julie-burchill-pay-substantial-damages-public-apology-ash-sarkar-defamation-harassment-case|work=Doughty Street Chambers|date=16 March 2021 |access-date=7 June 2021|language=en|archive-date=7 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210607171210/https://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/news/julie-burchill-pay-substantial-damages-public-apology-ash-sarkar-defamation-harassment-case|url-status=live}}</ref> As a result of the comments, her publisher, ], cancelled the scheduled publication of ''Welcome to the Woke Trials'', stating that her comments about Islam were “not defensible from a moral or intellectual standpoint”.<ref>{{cite news|last=Bakare|first=Lanre|title=Julie Burchill's publisher cancels book contract over Islam tweets|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2020/dec/15/julie-burchill-publisher-cancels-book-contract-islam-tweet-little-brown|work=The Guardian|date=15 December 2020|access-date=16 March 2021|archive-date=16 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316095426/https://www.theguardian.com/media/2020/dec/15/julie-burchill-publisher-cancels-book-contract-islam-tweet-little-brown|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In March 2021, after being sued for libel and harassment, Burchill retracted her comments, issued a full apology and paid substantial damages to Sarkar, including her legal costs.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
{{Tweet | |||
| name = Julie Burchill | |||
| username = BoozeAndFagz | |||
| text = On 13 December 2020 I made defamatory statements about @AyoCaesar, which I sincerely regret and retract and have undertaken not to repeat. I have agreed to pay substantial damages to Ash Sarkar and her legal costs. Here is my full and wholehearted apology. | |||
| date = 16 March 2021 | |||
| ID = 1371748021692682240 | |||
|block = yes | |||
}} | |||
Burchill stated: "I should not have sent these tweets, some of which included racist and misogynist comments regarding Ms Sarkar's appearance and her sex life." She further apologised for "liking" posts calling on Sarkar to kill herself<ref name="BBC 16 Mar">{{cite news |title=Julie Burchill makes 'full' apology for racist abuse of fellow writer |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-56407232 |work=BBC News |date=16 March 2021 |access-date=16 March 2021 |archive-date=16 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316102011/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-56407232 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Guardian 16 Mar">{{cite news |last1=Sarkar |first1=Ash |title=Julie Burchill abused me for being Muslim – yet she was cast as the victim {{!}} Ash Sarkar |url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/16/julie-burchill-muslim-islamophobic |work=The Guardian |date=16 March 2021 |language=en |access-date=16 March 2021 |archive-date=16 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316091752/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/16/julie-burchill-muslim-islamophobic |url-status=live }}</ref> and promised to refrain from any further harassment of Sarkar.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{cite news |title=Julie Burchill to pay substantial damages & public apology to Ash Sarkar in defamation/harassment case |url=https://www.rllaw.co.uk/julie-burchill-to-pay-substantial-damages-public-apology-to-ash-sarkar-in-defamation-harassment-case/ |website=Rahman Lowe Solicitors |language=en |date=16 March 2021 |access-date=16 March 2021 |archive-date=16 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316165602/https://www.rllaw.co.uk/julie-burchill-to-pay-substantial-damages-public-apology-to-ash-sarkar-in-defamation-harassment-case/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
==Personal life== | |||
Burchill married ] (whom she met at ''NME'') in 1979 at the age of 20.<ref name=spost /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?cite=f%2Fm7DZHjI38MESIpCW1mKw&scan=1|title=Index entry|accessdate=22 February 2022|work=FreeBMD|publisher=ONS|archive-date=22 February 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220222160452/https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?cite=f%2Fm7DZHjI38MESIpCW1mKw&scan=1|url-status=live}}</ref> She left Parsons three years later, leaving behind a son,<ref>{{cite news|last=Moreton|first=Cole|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/to-mum-i-was-just-an-inconvenience-says-burchills-son-1104110.html|title='To mum, I was just an inconvenience' says Burchill's son|work=The Independent|date=4 July 1999|access-date=1 July 2015|archive-date=4 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150704223345/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/to-mum-i-was-just-an-inconvenience-says-burchills-son-1104110.html|url-status=live}}</ref> which was followed by years of rancour in the media, described in 2002 as "a steady stream of vitriol in both directions";<ref name=spost /> she had claimed to have persevered with the "sexual side" of their marriage "by pretending that my husband was my friend ]".<ref name="Burchill170600" /> Her relationships, particularly with Parsons, have featured in her work; Parsons later wrote that "It's like having a stalker. I don't understand her fascination with someone whom she split up with 15 years ago".<ref name=spost /> | |||
Immediately after her relationship with Parsons, Burchill married ], the son of ] and ], with whom she also had a son.<ref>Jay Landesman {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925054440/http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/the-designer-rebel-who-slept-in-our-spare-room-julie-burchill-brought-white-bread-oldfashioned-values-and-angst-when-she-moved-in-with-her-inlaws-jay-landesman-remembers-1500674.html |date=25 September 2015 }}, ''The Independent'', 29 March 1993</ref> The sons from her marriages with Parsons and Landesman lived with their fathers after the separations. After splitting from Landesman in 1992, she married for a third time in 2004, to Daniel Raven, around 13 years her junior, and the brother of her former lover ].<ref name="Barber" /> She wrote of the joys of having a "toyboy" in her ''Times'' column in 2010.<ref>{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/cougar-moi-i-dont-care-about-our-13-year-age-gap-q0pz2jsj7vn|title=Cougar, moi? I don't care about our 13 year age gap|work=The Times|date=10 April 2010|access-date=16 March 2021|archive-date=7 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210607225146/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/cougar-moi-i-dont-care-about-our-13-year-age-gap-q0pz2jsj7vn|url-status=live}}{{subscription required}}</ref> Fellow NME journalist/author Paul Wellings wrote about their friendship in his book ''I'm A Journalist...Get Me Out of Here''. She has written about her lesbian relationships, and declared that "I would never describe myself as 'heterosexual', 'straight' or anything else. Especially not 'bisexual' (it sounds like a sort of communal vehicle missing a mudguard). I like 'spontaneous' as a sexual description".<ref name=guardian130509 /> In 2009 she said that she was only attracted to girls in their 20s, and since she was now nearly 50, "I really don't want to be an old perv. So best leave it".<ref name=guardian130509 /> | |||
She has lived in ] since 1995 and a book on her adopted home town titled ''Made in Brighton'' (Virgin Books) was published in April 2007. Her house in Hove was sold (and demolished for redevelopment as high-density flats) around 2005 for £1.5 million,<ref>Mark Simpson , {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071109121201/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20050327/ai_n13483648/pg_2 |date= 9 November 2007 }} ''The Independent on Sunday'', 27 March 2005. Retrieved 22 June 2007.</ref> of which she has given away £300,000, citing ]: "A man who dies rich, dies shamed."<ref name=ind051007 /> | |||
Burchill's second son, Jack Landesman, died by suicide in late June 2015, aged 29.<ref>{{cite news|last=Turner|first=Camilla|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11710272/Julie-Burchill-speaks-of-grief-after-her-son-takes-his-life.html|title=Julie Burchill speaks of grief after her son takes his life|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=1 July 2015|access-date=1 July 2015|archive-date=4 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150704010519/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11710272/Julie-Burchill-speaks-of-grief-after-her-son-takes-his-life.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Topping|first=Alexandra|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jul/01/julie-burchill-mourns-son-jack-killed-himself-this-week|title=Julie Burchill mourns son, Jack, who killed himself this week|work=The Guardian|date=1 July 2015|access-date=1 July 2015|archive-date=2 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150702044853/http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jul/01/julie-burchill-mourns-son-jack-killed-himself-this-week|url-status=live}}</ref> In an article for '']'', she wrote of his inability over many years to experience pleasure and the serious mental health issues from which he suffered.<ref name="Burchill">{{cite news|last=Burchill|first=Julie|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/julie-burchill-my-boy-jack-zg6rt9vg239|title=My boy Jack|work=The Sunday Times Magazine|date=19 July 2015|access-date=13 May 2018|archive-date=14 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180514072047/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/julie-burchill-my-boy-jack-zg6rt9vg239|url-status=live}}{{subscription required}}</ref> | |||
==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
*'' |
* ''The Boy Looked at Johnny'', co-written with ], 1978 | ||
*''Love It or Shove It'', 1985 | * ''Love It or Shove It'', 1985 | ||
*''Girls on Film'', 1986 | * ''Girls on Film'', 1986 | ||
*''Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised'', 1987 | * ''Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised'', 1987 | ||
*''Ambition'', 1989 | * '']'', 1989 | ||
*''Sex and Sensibility'', 1992 | * ''Sex and Sensibility'', 1992 | ||
*''No Exit'', 1993 | * ''No Exit'', 1993 | ||
*''Married Alive'', 1998 | * ''Married Alive'', 1998 | ||
*''I Knew I Was Right'', 1998, an |
* ''I Knew I Was Right'', 1998, an autobiography | ||
*''Diana'', 1999 | * ''Diana'', 1999 | ||
*''The Guardian Columns |
* ''The Guardian Columns 1998–2000'', 2000 | ||
*''On Beckham'', 2002 | * ''On Beckham'', 2002 | ||
*'']'', 2004 (adapted for television in 2005) | * '']'', 2004 (adapted for television in 2005) | ||
*''Sweet'', 2007 | * ''Sweet'', 2007 | ||
*''Made in Brighton'', 2007 co-written with her husband Daniel Raven | * ''Made in Brighton'', 2007, co-written with her husband Daniel Raven | ||
*''Not |
* ''Not in My Name: A compendium of modern hypocrisy'', 2008, co-written with ] | ||
* ''Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite'', 2014 | |||
* ''Welcome To The Woke Trials: How #Identity Killed Progressive Politics'', 2021 | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
<references/> | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
* | |||
* | * | ||
* | |||
* 2005 Spike Magazine extensive interview with Julie Burchill | |||
* | |||
* | |||
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| DATE OF BIRTH =3 July 1959 | |||
| PLACE OF BIRTH =], ], England | |||
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Burchill, Julie}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Burchill, Julie}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:28, 16 December 2024
English writer Not to be confused with Julie Bindel.
Julie Burchill | |
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Born | (1959-07-03) 3 July 1959 (age 65) Bristol, England |
Occupation |
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Period | 1976–present |
Spouse |
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Children | 2 |
Julie Burchill's voice from the BBC programme Desert Island Discs, 10 February 2013. |
Julie Burchill (born 3 July 1959) is an English writer. Beginning as a staff writer at the New Musical Express at the age of 17, she has since contributed to newspapers such as The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Times and The Guardian. Her writing, which was described by John Arlidge in The Observer in 2002 as "outrageously outspoken" and "usually offensive," has been the subject of legal action. Burchill is also a novelist, and her 2004 novel Sugar Rush was adapted for television.
Early life and education
Julie Burchill was born in Bristol and educated at Brislington Comprehensive School. Her father was a Communist union activist who worked in a distillery. Her mother had a job in a cardboard box factory. In 2010, Burchill wrote of her parents: "I don't care much for families. I adored my mum and dad, but to be honest I don't miss them much now they're dead"; three years later she contradicted this when she said she couldn't return to Bristol, as every time she heard someone speaking with her parents' Bristol accent it would remind her how much she missed them. She did not attend university, leaving the A-levels she had started a few weeks earlier to begin writing for the New Musical Express (NME).
Writing and broadcasting career
At the NME
She began her writing career at the New Musical Express (NME) in 1976, aged 17, after responding (coincidentally with her future husband Tony Parsons) to an advert in that paper seeking "hip young gunslingers" to write about the then emerging punk movement. She gained the job by submitting a "eulogy" of Patti Smith's Horses. She later wrote that at the time she only liked black music, and said: "When I actually heard a punk record, I thought, 'Oh my Lord! This is not music, this is just shouting'." Indeed, she managed to decry the first self-released punk album in the UK, The Outsiders' Calling on Youth featuring Adrian Borland: "Apple-cheeked Ade has a complexion that would turn a Devon milkmaid green with envy." Fortunately for her, as she later said, "Punk was over in two years. That was the only damn good thing about it." She left her position at the NME at the age of 20, and started freelancing to be able to write about other subjects, although she has never completely given up writing about pop music.
1980s
Her main employers after the NME were The Face and The Sunday Times, where she wrote about politics, pop, fashion and society, and was their film critic from 1984 to 1986. She admitted in 2008 to making up film reviews and having "skived" from screenings, and her ex-husband, Cosmo Landesman, has admitted to attending screenings on her behalf.
During the Falklands War in 1982, Burchill argued that the military dictatorship of General Galtieri represented a greater evil. She wrote articles favourable to Margaret Thatcher. Her sympathy for Thatcher helped in gaining a column for The Mail on Sunday, where in 1987 she went against the paper's usual political line by urging its readers to vote Labour. Though she claims to like the MoS, she said of journalists on the Daily Mail in 2008: "Everybody knows that hacks are the biggest bunch of adulterers, the most misbehaving profession in the world – and you have people writing for the Daily Mail writing as though they are vicars ... moralising on single mothers and whatnot."
Into the 1990s
Burchill has spoken repeatedly and frankly of her relationship with drugs, writing that she had "put enough toot up my admittedly sizeable snout to stun the entire Colombian armed forces". She declared that "As one who suffered from chronic shyness and a low boredom threshold ... I simply can't imagine that I could have ever had any kind of social life without , let alone have reigned as Queen of the Groucho Club for a good part of the '80s and '90s." While Burchill has frequently drawn on her personal life for her writing, her personal life has been a subject of public comment, especially during this period, when "everything about her – her marriages, her debauchery, her children – seemed to be news."
In 1991, Burchill, Landesman and Toby Young established a short-lived magazine Modern Review through which she met Charlotte Raven, with whom she had a much publicised affair. " was only a lesbian for about six weeks in 1995," she said in an interview with Lynn Barber in 2004, or "my very enjoyable six months of lesbianism" in a 2000 article. Launched under the slogan "Low culture for high brows", the magazine lasted until 1995, when Burchill and her colleagues fell out. It was briefly revived by Burchill, with Raven editing, in 1997. The "Fax war" in 1993 between Burchill and author Camille Paglia, published in the Modern Review, gained much attention.
In 1995, Burchill wrote a column for The Times, titled "I'm a bitch, and I'm proud", in which she argued that women should reclaim the word 'bitch,' used as a slur. She wrote: "it is the nature of these things that, in recent years, the slighted have taken steps to repossess the slight; thus, we have blacks who call each other 'nigger', pansies who call each other 'queer' and upper-class cretins who quite happily call each other 'Henry'."
In 1996, the actor, author, playwright and theatre director Steven Berkoff won a libel action against Burchill in respect of one of her articles, published in the Sunday Times newspaper, which included comments suggesting that he was "hideously ugly". The judge ruled that Burchill's actions "held him to ridicule and contempt." The late 1990s were a turbulent period for Burchill as she has recalled:
I got the heave-ho from my cushy billet at the Sunday Express, where I later learned my nickname had been "Caligula’s Horse" because my best friend – briefly the editor – had appointed me. For the first time in my brilliant career, no one wanted to hire me. Somehow I limped into a column on the doddering Punch – and then I got the boot from there, too! Surely I had reached the mythical rock bottom at last?
From 2000 to 2004
A user of cocaine, sharing in the activity in the company of Will Self among others, she was positive about her use in The Guardian in 2000 when defending actress Danniella Westbrook for Westbrook's loss of her nasal septum because of cocaine use. Journalist Deborah Orr, who was then married to Self, was scathing in The Independent of Burchill and her article: "She does not identify herself as a cocaine addict, so she has no pity for Ms Westbrook." In revenge for Deborah Orr's article, Burchill invented a supposedly long-standing crush on Will Self with the intention of upsetting Orr. A letter in The Independent in June 2000 from the head waitress at the Groucho Club at the time, Deborah Bosley, caused a minor stir. Responding to an article by Yvonne Roberts, Bosley, at the time the partner of Richard Ingrams, a long standing critic of Burchill, stated that Burchill was merely "a fat bird in a blue mac sitting in the corner" when ensconced at the Groucho.
The following year's Burchill on Beckham (2001), a short book about Burchill's opinions concerning David Beckham's life, career, and relationship with Victoria Beckham, attracted "some of the worst notices since Jeffrey Archer's heyday. 'Burchill is to football writing what Jimmy Hill is to feminist polemics'," wrote one reviewer. According to Robert Winder in the New Statesman: "The book fits in with Burchill's theme of praising the working class; Burchill presents Beckham as an anti-laddish symbol of old working-class values – he reminds her of those proud men of her childhood, 'paragons of generosity, industry and chastity'."
For five years until 2003, Burchill wrote a weekly column in The Guardian. Appointed in 1998 by Orr, while editor of the Guardian Weekend supplement, Burchill's career was in trouble; she had been sacked by the revived Punch magazine. Burchill frequently thanked Deborah Orr for rescuing her. One of the pieces she wrote for The Guardian was in reaction to the murder of BBC TV presenter Jill Dando in 1999. She compared the shock of Dando's murder to finding a "tarantula in a punnet full of strawberries". In 2002 she narrowly escaped prosecution for incitement to racial hatred, "following a Guardian column where she described Ireland as being synonymous with child molestation, Nazi-sympathising, and the oppression of women". Burchill had expressed anti-Irish sentiment several times throughout her career, announcing in the London journal Time Out that "I hate the Irish, I think they're appalling".
She supported the Iraq War, writing in The Guardian in 2003 that she was "in favour of a smaller war now rather than a far worse war later", and criticised those opposed to the war as "pro-Saddam apologists". She justified her stance by stating that "this war is about freedom, justice – and oil" and that because Britain and the United States sold weapons to Iraq that, "it is our responsibility to redress our greed and ignorance by doing the lion's share in getting rid of him".
Burchill left The Guardian acrimoniously, saying in an interview that they had offered her a sofa in lieu of a pay rise. She stated that she left the newspaper in protest at what she saw as its "vile anti-Semitism".
From 2005 to 2009
Burchill was an early critic of the fashion for denigrating lower social classes as "chavs". In 2005, she presented the Sky One documentary In Defence of Chavs. "Picking on people worse off than you are isn't humour. It's pathetic, it's cowardly and it's bullying," she commented in an interview for The Daily Telegraph at the time. "It's all to do with self-loathing. ... The middle classes can't bear to see people having more fun, so they attack Chavs for things like their cheap jewellery. It's jealousy, because they secretly know Chavs are better than them. They're even better looking."
Following her departure from The Guardian, in early 2005 she moved to The Times, who were more willing to meet her demands, doubling her previous salary. Shortly after starting her weekly column, she referred to George Galloway, but appeared to confuse him with former MP Ron Brown, reporting the misdeeds of Brown as those of Galloway, "he incited Arabs to fight British troops in Iraq." She apologised in her column and The Times paid damages thought to have been £50,000.
In 2006, The Times dropped her Saturday column, and arranged a more flexible arrangement with Burchill writing for the daily paper. Later it emerged, during a Guardian interview published on 4 August 2008, that eventually she "was given the jolly old heave ho" by The Times, and paid off for the last year of her three-year contract, still receiving the £300,000 she would have earned if she had been obliged to provide copy. She later described her columns for her abbreviated Times contract, which ended abruptly in 2007, thus: "I was totally taking the piss. I didn't spend much time on them and they were such arrant crap."
In February 2006, she announced plans for a year's sabbatical from journalism, planning, among other things, to study theology. In June 2007, she announced that she would not be returning to journalism, but instead concentrate on writing books and TV scripts and finally undertake a theology degree, but she returned to writing for The Guardian newspaper.
Burchill's co-written book with Chas Newkey-Burden, Not in My Name: A Compendium of Modern Hypocrisy, appeared in August 2008, and is dedicated "to Arik and Bibi" (Ariel Sharon and Benjamin Netanyahu). According to Gerald Jacobs, writing for The Jewish Chronicle in 2008, "this book does not merely stand up for Israel, it jumps up and down, cheers and waves its arms". The newspaper described her as "Israel's staunchest supporter in the UK media". When asked if Israel has any flaws, she responded: "Yes. They are much too tolerant of their freaking neighbours, much too reasonable".
She declared in 2005, after Ariel Sharon's withdrawal of Israeli settlers from the Gaza Strip, that "Israel is the only country I would fucking die for. He's the enemy of the Jews. Chucking his own people off the Gaza; to me that's disgusting". Besides writing occasional pieces for The Guardian, she wrote four articles for the centre-right politics and culture magazine Standpoint between July and October 2008.
2010s
At the end of June 2010 it was announced Burchill would be writing exclusively for The Independent, contributing a weekly full-page column for the paper. The connection lasted less than 18 months. Burchill wrote her last column for The Independent at the end of October 2011. Admitting he had tried to recruit Burchill for The Sun in the 1980s, Roy Greenslade commented: "my admittedly occasional reading of her columns in recent years has left feeling that she realises her old schtick is no longer working. She has run out of steam – and sympathetic newspaper editors".
Commenting on the Egyptian Revolution of 2011, Burchill wrote in The Independent: "It would be wonderful to think that what replaces Mubarak will be better. But here's the thing about Middle Eastern regimes: they're all vile. The ones that are 'friendly' are vile and the ones that hate us are vile. Revolutions in the region have a habit of going horribly wrong, and this may well have something to do with the fact that Islam and democracy appear to find it difficult to co-exist for long."
On 13 January 2013, Burchill wrote an article for The Observer defending Suzanne Moore after a reference by Moore to transsexuals had been greeted with a great deal of criticism. In Burchill's view, it showed the "chutzpah" of transsexuals to have their "cock cut off and then plead special privileges as women". There were a number of objections to her writing from members of the transgender community and non-transgender community alike. The editor of The Observer, John Mulholland, responded on the comments page to what he described as "many emails protesting about this piece" and stated that he would be looking into the issue. Liberal Democrat MP Lynne Featherstone, formerly a junior Minister for Women and Equalities, called for the dismissal of Burchill and Mulholland in response to the piece. The article was withdrawn from the website the following day and replaced with a message from Mulholland, but reappeared on the Telegraph website. On 18 January, The Observer's Readers Editor Stephen Pritchard defended the decision to remove the article from the newspaper's website, quoting the editor who took that decision as saying "This clearly fell outside what we might consider reasonable. The piece should not have been published in that form. I don't want the Observer to be conducting debates on those terms or with that language. It was offensive, needlessly. We made a misjudgment and we apologise for that".
Religion and philo-semitism
In her 1987 essay collection Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised, Burchill criticised what she called "the anti-Semitism of politicized American blacks" such as Jesse Jackson, who had referred to New York City as "Hymietown." Burchill wrote, "imagine how the blacks would have gnashed their diamond-studded teeth if a Jewish leader had publicly referred to Harlem as 'Nigger-town'!".
In 1999, Burchill said she "found God", and became a Lutheran and later a "self-confessed Christian Zionist". In June 2007, she announced that she would undertake a theology degree, although she subsequently decided to do voluntary work instead as a way to learn more about Christianity.
In June 2009, The Jewish Chronicle reported that Burchill had become a Friend of Brighton and Hove Progressive Synagogue and was again considering a conversion to Judaism. According to TheJC, she had attended Shabbat services for a month, and studying Hebrew, she described herself as an "ex-Christian", pointing out that she had been pondering on her conversion since the age of 25. Burchill said that "At a time of rising and increasingly vicious anti-semitism from both left and right, becoming Jewish especially appeals to me. ... Added to the fact that I admire Israel so much, it does seem to make sense – assuming of course that the Jews will have me". She wrote in November 2012: "The things I love about the Jews are: their religion, their language and their ancient country".
Burchill clashed with Rabbi Elli Tikvah Sarah of the Brighton and Hove Progressive Synagogue, and the Rabbi's lesbian partner, Jess Woods. Among the reasons for their differences was Rabbi Sarah's defence of Muslims and her advocacy of the Palestinian cause. In Burchill's words, the rabbi "respects PIG ISLAM". Rabbi Sarah told The Independent in September 2014: "The problem is doesn’t have any in-depth knowledge. I can imagine her endlessly watching the film Exodus with Paul Newman. She’s got a kind of Hollywood view of Jews. You know, ‘Jews are so clever, we’ve survived ...'."
In 2014, Burchill's crowdfunded book Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite was published. Tel Aviv-based writer Akin Ajayi in Haaretz thought "the reactionary solipsism of Unchosen is far removed from the affectionate warmness that a love of the Jewish people can be". Burchill's ex-husband, Cosmo Landesman, considered it to be an "exhilarating and exasperating mix of the utterly brilliant and the totally bonkers". He observes that "there are plenty of Jews Julie doesn't love" including the "millions of Jews around the world who have ever criticised Israel. Her love is blind, deaf and dumb to such an obvious contradiction". Guardian columnist Hadley Freeman wrote: "Burchill divides up the chosen people into Good Jews (hardliners, Israelites) and Bad Jews (liberal Jews) with the enthusiasm of an antisemite. Hilariously, she sets herself up as the Jewishness Police, railing against Jews who are not Jewish enough". In his review in The Independent, Keith Kahn-Harris described Unchosen as "occasionally touching, sometimes bigoted and sporadically hilarious" but that it "often degenerates into EDL-style abuse that lacks any redeeming wit." In The Guardian Will Self wrote, "I’m afraid I can’t really dignify her latest offering with the ascription 'book', nor the contents therein as 'writing' – rather they are sophomoric, hammy effusions, wrongheaded, rancorous, and pathetically self-aggrandising."
Other books and television programmes
Burchill has written novels and made television documentaries. Her lesbian-themed novel for teenagers Sugar Rush (2004) was adapted into a television drama series produced by Shine Limited for Channel 4. Lenora Crichlow's portrayal of the central character Maria Sweet inspired the 2007 sequel novel Sweet. Burchill has made television documentaries about the death of her father from asbestosis in 2002 (BBC Four) and Heat magazine broadcast on Sky One in 2006.
Welcome to the Woke Trials
Welcome To The Woke Trials: How #Identity Killed Progressive Politics was planned to be issued by Tabatha Stirling of Stirling Publishing in summer 2021 after being dropped by its original publisher following Burchill's defamatory tweets to Ash Sarkar. On 14 March 2021, when referencing her new publisher Burchill announced that, with Stirling, "I've found someone who's JUST LIKE ME." Stirling is alleged to have written a series of articles for Patriotic Alternative as "Miss Britannia", describing her son's school as "a hellhole for sensible, secure White boys" and claimed "there is one member of staff who is openly gay, and I mean RuPaul extra gay". On 16 March 2021, Burchill announced she would not publish her book with Stirling Publishing, the same day she issued a public apology for libel and harassment of Sarkar. The book was subsequently published by Academica Press.
Responses
Burchill has described her own style as the writing equivalent of screaming and throwing things. For her novel Sugar Rush her publicist described her as "Britain's most famous and controversial journalist". One of her most consistent themes is the championing of the working class against the middle class in most cases, and she has been particularly vocal in defending 'chavs'. According to Will Self, "Burchill's great talent as a journalist is to beautifully articulate the inarticulate sentiments and prejudices of her readers". For Michael Bywater, Burchill's "insights were, and remain, negligible, on the level of a toddler having a tantrum". John Arlidge wrote in The Observer in 2002: "If Burchill is famous for anything it is for being Julie Burchill, the brilliant, unpredictable, outrageously outspoken writer who has an iconoclastic, usually offensive, view on everything.
In November 1980, former Sex Pistols front man John Lydon gave an interview to Ann Louise Bardach in which he referred to Burchill and Tony Parsons as "toss-bag journalists, desperately trying to get in on something" in response to their book, The Boy Looked at Johnny, and described its chapter on amphetamines as "stupidity". Lydon was incensed by Burchill and Parsons attributing his talent to his alleged use of the drug in their book.
In October 1999, in an article for The Guardian, she wrote: "That young men succeed in suicide more often than girls isn't really the point. Indeed, the more callous among us would say that it was quite nice for young men finally to find something that they're better at than girls". After a previous occasion when Burchill wrote "suicides should be left to get on with it", she "received a small number of letters from people whose sons had killed themselves".
In 2002, her life was the subject of a one-woman West End play, Julie Burchill is Away, by Tim Fountain, with Burchill played by her friend Jackie Clune. A sequel by Fountain, Julie Burchill: Absolute Cult, followed in 2014, with Lizzie Roper in the central role.
In 2003, Burchill was ranked number 85 in Channel 4's poll of 100 Worst Britons. The poll was inspired by the BBC series 100 Greatest Britons, though it was less serious in nature. The aim was to discover the "100 worst Britons we love to hate". The poll specified that the nominees had to be British, alive and not currently in prison or pending trial. In 2005, on the 25th anniversary of the murder of John Lennon, she told The Guardian: "I don't remember where I was but I was really pleased he was dead, as he was a wife-beater, gay-basher, anti-Semite and all-round bully-boy." In the essay "Born Again Cows" published in Damaged Gods (1987), she wrote: "When the sex war is won prostitutes should be shot as collaborators for their terrible betrayal of all women."
On 6 June 2021, and shortly after the announcement of the birth of Lilibet Mountbatten-Windsor, the daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Burchill tweeted: "What a missed opportunity. They could have called it Georgina Floydina!”, a reference to George Floyd. Her comments were widely condemned, with racial equality activist Shola Mos-Shogbamimu stating: "She’s (Lilibet) referred to as 'IT'. The utter disrespect & dehumanisation of #HarryandMeghan children because of their proximity to ‘Blackness’ is Racist"; actress Kelechi Okafor wrote: "Likening baby Lilibet to George Floyd is to hone in on the fact she isn't fully white...She refers to Lilbet as 'it' even though it has been announced that the baby is a girl and she could've addressed her as such...Disgusting scenes." On 8 June, via her Facebook account, Burchill announced that she had been sacked by The Daily Telegraph as a result of her online comments.
Libel
In 2020, Burchill posted a series of defamatory tweets of Ash Sarkar, which included claims that she condones paedophilia and is supportive of Islamist terrorism. Burchill called on her Facebook followers to "wade in on Twitter" against "the Islamists" and the "nonces". As a result of the comments, her publisher, Little, Brown Book Group, cancelled the scheduled publication of Welcome to the Woke Trials, stating that her comments about Islam were “not defensible from a moral or intellectual standpoint”.
In March 2021, after being sued for libel and harassment, Burchill retracted her comments, issued a full apology and paid substantial damages to Sarkar, including her legal costs.
Julie Burchill @BoozeAndFagz On 13 December 2020 I made defamatory statements about @AyoCaesar, which I sincerely regret and retract and have undertaken not to repeat. I have agreed to pay substantial damages to Ash Sarkar and her legal costs. Here is my full and wholehearted apology.
16 March 2021
Burchill stated: "I should not have sent these tweets, some of which included racist and misogynist comments regarding Ms Sarkar's appearance and her sex life." She further apologised for "liking" posts calling on Sarkar to kill herself and promised to refrain from any further harassment of Sarkar.
Personal life
Burchill married Tony Parsons (whom she met at NME) in 1979 at the age of 20. She left Parsons three years later, leaving behind a son, which was followed by years of rancour in the media, described in 2002 as "a steady stream of vitriol in both directions"; she had claimed to have persevered with the "sexual side" of their marriage "by pretending that my husband was my friend Peter York". Her relationships, particularly with Parsons, have featured in her work; Parsons later wrote that "It's like having a stalker. I don't understand her fascination with someone whom she split up with 15 years ago".
Immediately after her relationship with Parsons, Burchill married Cosmo Landesman, the son of Fran and Jay Landesman, with whom she also had a son. The sons from her marriages with Parsons and Landesman lived with their fathers after the separations. After splitting from Landesman in 1992, she married for a third time in 2004, to Daniel Raven, around 13 years her junior, and the brother of her former lover Charlotte Raven. She wrote of the joys of having a "toyboy" in her Times column in 2010. Fellow NME journalist/author Paul Wellings wrote about their friendship in his book I'm A Journalist...Get Me Out of Here. She has written about her lesbian relationships, and declared that "I would never describe myself as 'heterosexual', 'straight' or anything else. Especially not 'bisexual' (it sounds like a sort of communal vehicle missing a mudguard). I like 'spontaneous' as a sexual description". In 2009 she said that she was only attracted to girls in their 20s, and since she was now nearly 50, "I really don't want to be an old perv. So best leave it".
She has lived in Brighton and Hove since 1995 and a book on her adopted home town titled Made in Brighton (Virgin Books) was published in April 2007. Her house in Hove was sold (and demolished for redevelopment as high-density flats) around 2005 for £1.5 million, of which she has given away £300,000, citing Andrew Carnegie: "A man who dies rich, dies shamed."
Burchill's second son, Jack Landesman, died by suicide in late June 2015, aged 29. In an article for The Sunday Times Magazine, she wrote of his inability over many years to experience pleasure and the serious mental health issues from which he suffered.
Bibliography
- The Boy Looked at Johnny, co-written with Tony Parsons, 1978
- Love It or Shove It, 1985
- Girls on Film, 1986
- Damaged Gods: Cults and Heroes Reappraised, 1987
- Ambition, 1989
- Sex and Sensibility, 1992
- No Exit, 1993
- Married Alive, 1998
- I Knew I Was Right, 1998, an autobiography
- Diana, 1999
- The Guardian Columns 1998–2000, 2000
- On Beckham, 2002
- Sugar Rush, 2004 (adapted for television in 2005)
- Sweet, 2007
- Made in Brighton, 2007, co-written with her husband Daniel Raven
- Not in My Name: A compendium of modern hypocrisy, 2008, co-written with Chas Newkey-Burden
- Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite, 2014
- Welcome To The Woke Trials: How #Identity Killed Progressive Politics, 2021
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External links
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