Godfrey Boyle
Godfrey Boyle was a British author and academic who was a leading figure in the British alternative technology movement, and an authority on sustainability and renewable energy.
He was the founder of [Undercurrents (magazine)|Undercurrents (magazine)|Undercurrents], the pioneering magazine of ‘radical science and alternative technology’.
Early life and education
Boyle was born in Brentford, West London to Kevin and Phyllis Boyle. The family moved to Belfast where he was educated at St Malachy’s College. Boyle later attended Queen’s University Belfast where he studied for an electrical engineering degree but failed his final exams.While studying in Belfast, Boyle edited a student science magazine called Spectrum and pursued interests in the paranormal, alternative philosophy, libertarian and anarchist politics, and pirate radio.
Career
Undercurrents
Moving from Belfast to London, Boyle worked as a journalist on Electronics Weekly before founding Undercurrents in 1972, having had the idea for an ‘underground’ science and technology magazine since the late 1960s, which would drawing on titles such as Oz and International Times, as well as more obscure publications. Undercurrents, also known as ‘Undies’, initially came out as collections of individually printed articles and leaflets, put together in a polythene bag to serve as a ‘common carrier’ and to which articles could be added, inspired by ideas of decentralization and networking that Boyle had become interested in.Issue 2 of Undercurrents was dedicated to energy and produced in time for the first United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, in summer 1972, which Boyle attended with the editorial team, including Peter Harper, who organised a ‘People’s Technology Exhibition’ as an alternative event during the conference.
After transitioning to a more conventional format with issue 5, the magazine became a success, achieving a bimonthly circulation of 7,000 copies. At the end of 1973 Boyle left his job at Electronics Weekly to focus on editing Undercurrents, and formed Undercurrents Limited to administer the magazine. Undercurrents continued to be published independently for 10 years before merging with Resurgence magazine.