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Walter Jackson Bate

 
American Author: Walter Jackson Bate

  • Born: Mfay 23, 1918
  • Birthplace: Mankato, MN
  • Died: July 26, 1999

Award-winning biographer Walter Jackson Bate, won the Pulitzer Prize twice, for his biographies of John Keats and Samuel Johnson. The latter also earned him a National Book Award and the Nation Book Critics Circle Award. Bate graduated summa cum laude from Harvard in 1939, and received his Ph.D. in 1942. He taught history and literature there from 1946 until his retirement in 1986. Bate's earlier works include articles on criticism and eighteenth-century literature; Negative Capability (1939), a study of Keats and the poetic imagination; The Stylistic Development of Keats (1945); From Classic to Romantic (1946) a series of Lowell Lectures on the eighteenth-century transition to modern conceptions of art; The Achievement of Samuel Johnson (1955), winner of the Gauss Award of the Phi Beta Kappa, and the textbook, Criticism: the Major Texts.

Most Famous Works

  • John Keats (1963)
  • Samuel Johnson (1977)
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Works: Works by Walter Jackson Bate
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(1918-1999)

1963John Keats. In a significant year for Keats scholarship, Bate wins the Pulitzer Prize for his meticulously researched and comprehensive biography; Aileen Ward (b. 1919) receives the National Book Award for her psychological study of Keats's development, John Keats: The Making of a Poet.
1977Samuel Johnson. Bate wins the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, and the Nation Book Critics Circle Award for his biography, which joins Johnson's career, character, and work into an interpretive whole that stresses Johnson's modernity.

Wikipedia: Walter Jackson Bate
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Walter Jackson Bate (May 23, 1918 – July 26, 1999) was an American literary critic and biographer. He was born in Mankato, Minnesota.

He is known for two Pulitzer Prize-winning biographies, of John Keats and Samuel Johnson. Bate 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.

Bate retired from teaching at Harvard in 1986, and died at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, aged 81.

Major works

  • The Achievement of Samuel Johnson (1955).
  • From Classic to Romantic: Premises of Taste in Eighteenth-century England (1961).
  • John Keats (1963).
  • Negative Capability: The Intuitive Approach in Keats (1965).
  • Coleridge (1968).
  • The Burden of the Past and the English Poet (1970).
  • Samuel Johnson (1977).

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