Subdivision
• | 402. Criticism: Arts and Letters | [X] |
| | Name: | Dr. Paul Alpers | | Institution: | University of California, Berkeley; Smith College | | Year Elected: | 2004 | | Class: | 4. Humanities | | Subdivision: | 402. Criticism: Arts and Letters | | Residency: | Resident | | Living? : |
Deceased
| | Birth Date: | 1932 | | Death Date: | May 19, 2013 | | | | | Paul Alpers was a distinguished literary historian and classicist, a master of the English, European and classical traditions, and an academic of the first rank. In his first book, The Poetry of the Faerie Queene, he showed himself to be "a learned and sensitive reader of Elizabethan poetry." He developed an original reading of Spenser's rhetorical modes, to which he returned in an important series of articles on narration. He next, as an extension of his work on Spenser, began to study the pastoral traditions. This resulted in an analysis and translation of Virgil's Eclogues and then What is Pastoral?, winner of the Christian Gauss Award. As Dr. Alpers traces the evolution of pastoral poetry from Theocritus and Virgil, through its great incarnations in the Renaissance, to its flowerings in modern literature, he has written what is arguably the definitive study of the subject, a work of exhaustive scholarship and literary intelligence. Dr. Alpers taught at the University of California, Berkeley beginning in 1961 and became Class of 1942 Professor of English Emeritus in 2000. He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 2004. Paul Alpers died May 19, 2013, at the age of 80 in Northampton, Massachusetts. | |
| Name: | Dr. J. Hillis Miller | | Institution: | University of California, Irvine | | Year Elected: | 2004 | | Class: | 4. Humanities | | Subdivision: | 402. Criticism: Arts and Letters | | Residency: | Resident | | Living? : |
Deceased
| | Birth Date: | 1928 | | Death Date: | February 9, 2021 | | | | | J. Hillis Miller taught for many years at the Johns Hopkins University and then at Yale University before moving in 1986 to the University of California, Irvine, where he was UCI Distinguished Research Professor of English and Comparative Literature Emeritus. He was the author of many books and essays on nineteenth and twentieth-century English, European, and American literature, and on literary theory. His most recent books are Others (2001), Speech Acts in Literature (2002), On Literature (2002), and Zero Plus One (2003). His recent work includes a book on speech acts in the novels and stories of Henry James. A J. Hillis Miller Reader has also recently appeared from Edinburgh University Press and Stanford University Press. He died on February 9, 2021. | |
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