Alastair Fowler

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Alastair David Shaw Fowler CBE FBA (born 1930, Glasgow, Scotland) is a Scottish literary critic and editor, an authority on Edmund Spenser, Renaissance literature, genre theory, and numerology. Fowler was educated at the University of Edinburgh, M.A. (1952). He was subsequently awarded an M.A. (1955), D.Phil. (1957) and D.Litt. (1962) from Oxford. As a graduate student at Oxford, Fowler studied with C. S. Lewis, and later edited Lewis's Spenser's Images of Life.

Fowler was junior research fellow at Queen's College, Oxford (1955–59). He also taught at Swansea (1959–61), and Brasenose College, Oxford (1962–71). He was Regius Professor of literature at the University of Edinburgh (1972–84) and also taught intermittently at universities in the United States, including Columbia (1964) and the University of Virginia (1969, 1979, 1985–98).[1] He delivered the 1980 Warton Lecture on English Poetry.[2]

Fowler is known for his editorial work. His edition of John Milton's Paradise Lost, part of the Longman poets series, has some of the most scholarly and detailed notes on the poem and is widely cited by Milton scholars. Writing in The Guardian, John Mullan called it "a monument of scholarship."[3]

His book Kinds of Literature is a pioneering study in the field of genre scholarship.

Fowler has been critical of some recent trends in literary scholarship, including "new historicism." In 2005, he published an extremely critical review of Stephen Greenblatt's Will in the World, which was widely discussed.[4]

He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2014 New Year Honours for services to literature and education.[5]

Fowler's papers are on deposit at the National Library of Scotland.[6]

Work[]

Edited volumes[]

  • C. S. Lewis, Spenser's Images of Life, 1967
  • John Milton, Paradise Lost, 1968, revised edition 2006
  • Silent Poetry: Essays in Numerological Analysis, 1970
  • Topics in Criticism, ed., with Christopher Butler, 1971
  • The New Oxford Book of Seventeenth-Century Verse, 1991, 2008
  • The Country House Poem, 1994.

Authored volumes (criticism)[]

  • Spenser and the Numbers of Time, 1964.
  • Triumphal Forms: Structural Patterns in Elizabethan Poetry, 1970
  • Conceitful Thought: Interpretation of English Renaissance Poems, 1975
  • Kinds of Literature, 1982.
  • A History of English Literature, 1987
  • Times Purple Masquers: Stars and the Afterlife in Renaissance English Literature, 1996
  • Renaissance Realism, 2003
  • How to Write, 2006
  • Literary Names: Personal Names in English Literature, 2012

Authored volumes (poetry)[]

  • Seventeen, 1971
  • Catacomb Suburb, 1976
  • From the Domain of Arnheim, 1982
  • Helen's Topless Towers, 1993

Reviews[]

  • Craig, Cairns (1982), Giving Speech to the Silent, which includes a review of From the Domain of Arnheim, in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 10, Autumn 1982, pp. 43 & 44, ISSN 0264-0856

See also[]

  • Poioumenon

References[]

  1. ^ "Allastair Fowler (Debrett's online)". Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  2. ^ Fowler, Alastair (1982). "Robert Herrick" (PDF). Proceedings of the British Academy. 66: 243–264. (See Robert Herrick.)
  3. ^ Mullan, John. "Editorial Review from Amazon.com". Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  4. ^ Sutherland, John. "Where there's a Will there's a payday". The Guardian, 15 February 2005. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  5. ^ "No. 60728". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 2013. p. 8.
  6. ^ "Fowler Papers at National Library of Scotland" (PDF).

External links[]

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