F. W. Bateson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick (Noel) Wilse Bateson (1901-1978) was an English literary scholar and critic. He is often quoted for his remark, " "If the Mona Lisa is in the Louvre, where are 'Hamlet and Lycidas?", from Essays in Critical Dissent. He is noted also for his 1959 essay The English School in a Democracy.
He was a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
[edit] Works
- Oxford Poetry (1923) editor
- English Comic Drama 1700-1750 (1929)
- Works of Congreve (1930) editor
- The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (1941) five volumes, to 1957
- Towards a Socialist Agriculture (1946) Fabian studies, editor
- English Poetry: A Critical Introduction (1950)
- Twickenham edition of Alexander Pope, Vol. 3.2, Epistles to Several Persons (Moral Essays) (1951) editor
- Wordsworth: A Re-Interpretation (1954)
- English poetry and the English Language (1961)
- A Guide to English Literature (1963)
- A Guide to English and American Literature (1970) with Harrison T. Meserole
- The scholar-critic: An introduction to literary research (1972)
- Essays in Critical Dissent (1972)
- The School for Scandal (1979) editor
[edit] Reference
- Essays in Criticism XXIX (1979) Bateson volume