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Peter Conrad (academic)





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Peter Conrad (born 1948) is an Australian-born academic specialising in English literature, who taught at Christ Church at the University of Oxford. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Conrad was born in Hobart, Tasmania, and attended Hobart High School. After graduating from the University of Tasmania in 1968, Conrad went to Oxford University, UK, on a Rhodes Scholarship,[1] studying at New College. He became a fellowofAll Souls College from 1970 to 1973 before taking up his current post at Christ Church. There he taught English from 1973, and has been a visiting professor at Princeton University and at Williams College, and a guest lecturer throughout the United States.[2] By 2018 he had retired.[3]

His criticism includes a major history of English literature, The Everyman History of English Literature, a cultural history of the twentieth century, two autobiographical works and a novel. He has written books of criticism on Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock and has been a prolific writer of features and reviews for many magazines and newspapers including The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Observer, the New Statesman, and The Monthly.[citation needed]

Reviewing J. R. R. Tolkien's The Silmarillion in the New Statesman, Conrad stated that "Tolkien can't actually write".[4]

A review by Richard Poirier of Conrad's 1980 book, Imagining America, in the London Review of Books found it "so slipshod, with such fundamental and pointedly homophobic misunderstandings of Oscar Wilde, Rupert Brooke and W. H. Auden", that the reviewer wondered how it made it into print.[5]

Bibliography

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References

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  • ^ Biography Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine from Christ Church, Oxford
  • ^ Christ Church website, "Teaching and Research Staff", accessed 8 November 2018
  • ^ Conrad, Peter (23 September 1977), "The Babbit", New Statesman, vol. 94, p. 408
  • ^ "Peter Conrad's Flight from Precision"byRichard Poirier, London Review of Books, vol. 2, no. 14, 17 July 1980
  • ^ Fitzgerald, Michael (13 October 2003). "The View From Abroad". Time. Archived from the original on 30 January 2012.
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    Last edited on 24 May 2024, at 12:40  





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