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Walter Jackson Bate

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Occupation
  
Professor

Name
  
Walter Bate


Role
  
Literary critic

Walter Jackson Bate httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Genre
  
Literary criticism, biography

Died
  
July 26, 1999, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography

Notable awards
  
Pulitzer Prize, National Book Award

Books
  
The Burden of the Past a, Criticism, From Classic to Romantic, Negative Capability: The Intuiti, The Stylistic Develop

Similar People
  
Samuel Johnson, James Engell, Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Education
  
Harvard University (1942)

Walter Jackson Bate (May 23, 1918 – July 26, 1999) was an American literary critic and biographer. He is known for Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography-winning biographies of Samuel Johnson (1978) and John Keats (1964). Samuel Johnson also won the 1978 U.S. National Book Award in Biography.

Bate was born in Mankato, Minnesota. He studied (under Douglas Bush) and later taught at Harvard University.

His critical work, especially The Burden of the Past and the English Poet, responds to and anticipates some aspects of the work of Harold Bloom. His biographies of Keats and Johnson have enjoyed extraordinary reputations both as scholarly resources and as works of literature in their own right. Jane Kenyon, one of many writers to be influenced by the Keats biography, paraphrases it in her poem "Reading Late of the Death of Keats":

Clearly I had packed the wrong book
in my haste: Keats died, propped up
to get more air. Severn
straightened the body on the bed,
and cut three dampened curls
from Keats's head.

He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1957. Bate retired from teaching at Harvard in 1986, and died on July 26, 1999, at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, aged 81. A brief memoir appeared in 2013.

Major works

  • Negative Capability: The Intuitive Approach in Keats (1939; reprinted 1976, 2012).
  • From Classic to Romantic: Premises of Taste in Eighteenth-century England (1946).
  • Criticism: The Major Texts edited by (1952).
  • The Achievement of Samuel Johnson (1955).
  • The Stylistic Development of Keats (1958).
  • Prefaces to Criticism (1959).
  • From Classic to Romantic: Premises of Taste in Eighteenth-century England (1961).
  • John Keats (1963).
  • Keats: A Collection of Critical Essays (1964).
  • Coleridge (1968).
  • The Burden of the Past and the English Poet (1970).
  • Samuel Johnson (1977).
  • References

    Walter Jackson Bate Wikipedia