Kyk-Over-Al was founded in 1945 by the
British Guiana Writers' Association (BGWA) and the British Guiana Union of Cultural Clubs (BGUCC), to "be an instrument to help forge a Guianese people, and to make them conscious of their intellectual and spiritual possibilities". The first issue, priced at one
shilling, appeared in December 1945, and was edited by A. J. Seymour, who at that time was an executive member of the BGWA and honorary secretary of the BGUCC. The magazine was named for
Kyk-Over-Al ("see over all"), the ruined Dutch fort on a small island near the confluence of the
Essequibo,
Mazaruni, and
Cuyuni Rivers in the Guyanese interior. As Seymour explained in his editorial notes, "although ruined,
Kykoveral still stands to remind us of our
Amerindian and
Dutch heritage.... As a title for a periodical,
Kykoveral calls for a quick and wide vigilance and the expression of an alert people." (Seymour almost always spelled the name of the magazine as a single word, unhyphenated; but the hyphenated form
Kyk-Over-Al appeared on the magazine's cover, and this is the form that has been generally accepted over the years.) Though
Kyk-Over-Al began as a project of the BGWA and the BGUCC, Seymour from the beginning took a leading role in its direction and the magazine soon became his own private project—or, it might be more accurate to say it became a Seymour family project, since his wife Elma assumed responsibility for many business matters, including the advertising that made publication possible. Between 1945 and 1961, 28 issues of
Kyk-Over-Al appeared, publishing the work of every important Guyanese writer of the period—most notably
Wilson Harris,
Edgar Mittelholzer,
Martin Carter, and Seymour himself—as well as many writers from other territories of the Anglophone Caribbean. Apart from fiction and poetry,
Kyk-Over-Al published a number of groundbreaking critical essays, many written by Seymour, examining the work of
West Indian writers and attempting to define the literature that began to emerge in the
Caribbean in the years after
World War II. Other notable critics who contributed to the magazine include
Frank Collymore,
Ivan Van Sertima and
Kenneth Ramchand. In 1962, Seymour, by profession a civil servant, resigned from his position as head of government information services after a disagreement with Premier
Cheddi Jagan over the political implications of his role. He accepted a post with the Caribbean Organisation, based in
Puerto Rico. When he left
British Guiana,
Kyk-Over-Al ceased publication. In
The Making of Guyanese Literature, a long essay Seymour wrote in 1980, he noted that "the main emphases in
Kykoveral were on poetry and criticism.... The issues presented a total of nearly 500 poems in all and several numbers were devoted to anthologies of Guyanese and West Indian poetry."
The Kyk-Over-Al Anthology of West Indian Poetry revised by A. J. Seymour, was published in 1957. ==Revival (1984–present)==