User:Steve Quinn/The One King Lear

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The One King Lear by Sir Brian Vickers, published by Harvard University Press in 2016[1][2]

Revisionists[edit]

"The members of the “revisionist movement” as Vickers conceives it are primarily the contributors to The Division of the Kingdoms: Shakespeare’s Two Versions of “King Lear” (Oxford University Press, 1983)" - "namely, MacDonald P. Jackson, John Kerrigan, Gary Taylor, Steven Urkowitz, Michael Warren, Roger Warren, and Stanley Wells."[3][4]

About the author[edit]

Sir Brian William Vickers, FBA (born 1937) is a British academic, now Emeritus Professor at ETH Zurich. He is known for his work on the history of rhetoric, Shakespeare, John Ford, and Francis Bacon. He joined the English Department at University College London as a visiting professor in 2012.

He graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge, garnering a Bachelor of Arts in 1962 with a Double First in English, winning both the Charles Oldham Shakespeare Scholarship and the Harness Shakespeare Essay Prize. He was awarded his doctorate from Cambridge in 1967, and was a fellow of Downing College[5] from 1966 to 1971 during which time he directed studies in English. In 1972 he became professor ordinarius at ETH Zurich.

He has been a fellow of the British Academy since 1998 (Corresponding, Ordinary Fellow from 2003)[6] and a senior research fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London since 2004. He was knighted for services to literary scholarship in the New Year Honours of 2008.[7] He is the general editor of an old-spelling edition of the Complete Works of John Ford, published by Oxford University Press.

References[edit]

  1. ^ the Guardian, Harvard review, Stephen Greenblatt
  2. ^ Holger S. Syme, Jonathan Bate, Eric Rasmussen
  3. ^ Rasmussen
  4. ^ Williams, George Walton. "Book review." Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England. 2 (1985): 343-50. Accessed June 11, 2020. JSTOR 24322241
  5. ^ [1] University of Cambridge website
  6. ^ "Archived Document". Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
  7. ^ "Arise, Sir Brian", Times Literary Supplement website, 2 January 2008.

External links[edit]