Age, Biography and Wiki
Mark Cocker was born on 1959 in United Kingdom, is a British author and naturalist (born 1959). Discover Mark Cocker's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 65 years old?
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He is a member of famous author with the age 65 years old group.
Mark Cocker Height, Weight & Measurements
At 65 years old, Mark Cocker height not available right now. We will update Mark Cocker's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Who Is Mark Cocker's Wife?
His wife is Mary Muir
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Mary Muir |
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Mark Cocker Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Mark Cocker worth at the age of 65 years old? Mark Cocker’s income source is mostly from being a successful author. He is from United Kingdom. We have estimated Mark Cocker's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Pending |
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Mark Cocker Social Network
Timeline
Mark Cocker (born 1959) is a British author and naturalist.
He lives with his wife, Mary Muir, and two daughters in Claxton, Norfolk.
The countryside around Claxton is a theme for two of his twelve books.
Cocker has written extensively for British newspapers and magazines including The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, The Times, The Independent and BBC Wildlife.
He was educated at Buxton College, and studied English Literature at the University of East Anglia (1978–82), where he became immersed in East Anglia's nationally important wildlife landscapes, including the North Norfolk coast, Breckland and the Broads.
These became the inspiration for the vast majority of 900+ articles on wildlife, published in national and regional newspapers.
Between 1982 and 1984 he spent a total of 10 months in India and Nepal.
This proved to be the background to two biographical studies: A Himalayan Ornithologist: The Life and Work of Brian Houghton Hodgson and Richard Meinertzhagen: Soldier Scientist and Spy.
These examined two remarkable figures from the age of Empire, radically different in personality, but united by the polymathic range of their interests.
Hodgson was the Honourable East India Company's resident (proto Ambassador) in Nepal, where he researched zoology, from fish and amphibians, to birds and mammals.
He was also a scholar of Himalayan languages and of Mahayana Buddhism.
Six weeks spent in a Tibetan Buddhist monastery led to Cocker's involvement in this book.
Meinertzhagen, on the other hand, was a big-game hunter, a soldier, naturalist, minor political figure, writer, intelligence officer, explorer and diarist.
An active environmentalist, Cocker worked for the RSPB (1985), English Nature (now Natural England 1985–86) and BirdLife International (1988–89).
He has written a regular 'Country Diary' column in the Guardian since 1988 and a wildlife column in the international subscribers' edition, the Guardian Weekly from 1996 to 2002.
He reviews regularly for the Guardian and the Times Literary Supplement.
Cocker was brought up and educated in Buxton, Derbyshire, near to the Peak District National Park.
This early access to the spectacular limestone flora of the Derbyshire Dales and the specialised upland birds of the Dark Peak provided formative experiences in his evolution as a naturalist.
Cocker's biography of Meinertzhagen received widespread critical acclaim and was judged, with Mark Hudson's Our Grandmothers' Drums and Bill Bryson's The Lost Continent, one of the highlights for Secker and Warburg in 1989.
The novelist William Boyd, who had drawn on some of Meinertzhagen's writings in his novel An Ice-Cream War, said of Cocker's biographical study of Meinertzhagen:
"Mark Cocker lucidly and honestly tries to pin the man down and succeeds admirably insofar as such an attempt is possible. The problem with Meinertzhagen, … is that the chief witness and key source is the man himself. Cocker has unearthed in his diaries patent elaborations, exaggerations and falsehoods and there is evidence too that in his scientific career Meinertzhagen indulged in practices that would be considered highly fraudulent. … But with that reservation it is a compelling story and Meinertzhagen, however bizarre or preposterous or sinister or admirable we may think him, is one of the genuinely fascinating mavericks in 20th-century history."
Cocker's next two books reflected his darkening perception of Britain's wider imperial impact upon the lands and peoples that they explored and occupied.
In the 1990s, Cocker shifted his focus from the orthodox biography of colonial figures to a moral reflection upon the real impact of European Empire; this resulted in his next two books: Loneliness and Time: British Travel Writing in the Twentieth Century and Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold: Europe’s Conflict with Tribal People.
Loneliness and Time is an attempt to provide both a generic understanding of the importance of travel and foreign lands to the British psyche, and an investigation of the intellectual value and literary canons of the travel book.
It received mixed reviews.
Loneliness and Time was followed by an indictment of European exploitation and destruction of indigenous people, Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold, which Cocker considered his most important book.
The work focuses on four collisions between Europeans and indigenous cultures: the conquest of Mexico, the British onslaught on the Tasmanian Aborigines, the uprooting of the Apaches, and the German campaign against the tribes of Southwest Africa.
The book was praised and criticised on both sides of the Atlantic for similar reasons.
Among its critics, Ronald Wright, noted its "shaky existential dichotomy between Europeans and "tribal peoples"", while fellow historian Alfred Crosby suggested that "Cocker has written the kind of book we needed a generation ago, when our concept of history was profoundly Eurocentric, but surely now all of us given to reading history books are doubtful about the immaculate gloriousness of white civilization".
By contrast, Charles Nicholl wrote that "Cocker succeeds in finding a tone appropriate to the matter: he has a journalistic sense of impact and a powerful command of historical narrative. This is a powerful book, communicating its fierce indignation without recourse to polemic.", while Ronald Wright stated "The most powerful theme of Mark Cocker's books is … his vivid map of hell into which people can so easily descend when they have ideology, means and opportunity."
All of Cocker's subsequent work has focused on aspects of natural history.
The best known is the epic Birds Britannica, a work of nature study, rich with literary, historical and cultural references.
It was based on Flora Britannica by nature writer Richard Mabey, who initiated its sister volume.
However Mabey's ill health meant that it was written entirely by Cocker.
"In the past, birds animated long journeys to market, days of trudge at trawl or plough. Their habits bred anthropomorphisms, superstitions and nicknames. These in themselves provide an extraordinary glimpse into the imaginative range of our own species. Now that we drive everywhere, now that fishermen and farmers are growing as scarce as marsh warblers, we see birds differently. Birds Britannica shows that this need not be seen as something artificial or contrived but as part of a long and ever-shifting relationship, an indicator of our own place in nature."
Cocker's work on the ubiquitous crow is in similar spirit: a rare combination of natural history and cultural anthropology.
Crow Country is Cocker's most successful book to date, receiving widespread critical acclaim.
In 1998 he received a Winston Churchill Travel Fellowship to explore the cultural importance of birds in West Africa (Benin and Cameroon).
Cocker has travelled to over 40 countries spanning 5 continents in pursuit of wildlife.