
Lectures on Shakespeare
W. H. Auden(Author)
Arthur C. Kirsch(Editor)
Faber & Faber (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 22. January 2001
Book
Hardback
452 pages
978-0-571-20712-1 (ISBN)
Description
In New York in 1946-7, Auden gave informal lectures on most of Shakespeare's plays and the Sonnets. Believing that criticism is live conversation, he discarded his script each time. Fortunately, the texts were recovered to form this extraordinary addition to the canon of Shakespeare commentaries.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
798 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-571-20712-1 (9780571207121)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
W. H. Auden was born in York in 1907, and brought up in Birmingham. He went to Christ Church College, Oxford, where Stephen Spender privately printed a booklet of his poems. After university he lived for a time in Berlin, before returning to England to teach. His first book, Poems, was published by T. S. Eliot at Faber in 1930. Other volumes of poems and plays followed during the 1930s. He went to Spain during the civil war, to Iceland (with Louis MacNeice) and later travelled to China. In 1939 he and Christopher Isherwood left for America, where Auden spent the next fifteen years lecturing, reviewing, writing poetry and opera librettos, and editing anthologies. He became an American citizen in 1946, and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1948. In 1956 he was elected Professor of Poetry at Oxford, and a year later went to live in Kirchstetten in Austria, after spending several summers on Ischia. He died in Vienna in 1973.