Bernard Bergonzi - Works

Works

  • Godolphin and Other Poems (Latin Press, 1952)
  • Descartes and the Animals - Poems 1948-54 (1954)
  • The Fantasy Poets: Number 34 (Fantasy Press 1957) with Dennis Keene and Oscar Mellor
  • The Early H. G. Wells: A Study of The Scientific Romances (1961)
  • L.P.Hartley and Anthony Powell (1962) with Paul Bloomfield, British Council, Writers and Their Work #144, revised 1971 as Bergonzi on Powell
  • Heroes' Twilight. A Study of the Literature of the Great War (1965) revised 1980
  • An English Sequence (1966) poems
  • Innovations: Where is our Culture Going? (1968) editor, with Marshall Mcluhan, Frank Kermode, Leslie Fiedler
  • Great Short Works of Aldous Huxley (1969) editor
  • T.S.Eliot: Four Quartets (1969) editor, essays
  • The Situation of the Novel (1970)
  • "The Twentieth Century" (1970) editor, Volume 7 of the Sphere History of Literature in the English Language
  • Memorials (1970) poems
  • T. S. Eliot (1972)
  • The Turn of a Century - Essays on Victorian and Modern English Literature (1973)
  • H. G. Wells - A Collection of Critical Essays (1976) editor
  • Gerard Manley Hopkins (1977)
  • Reading the Thirties (1978)
  • Years (Mandeville Press 1979) poems
  • The Roman Persuasion (1981) novel
  • The Myth of Modernism and Twentieth Century Literature (1986)
  • A Short History of English Literature (1990) revision of Ifor Evans
  • Exploding English: Criticism, Theory, Culture (OUP, 1991)
  • Wartime and Aftermath : English Literature and Its Background, 1939-60 (OUP, 1993)
  • David Lodge (1995)
  • War Poets and Other Subjects (1999)
  • A Victorian Wanderer. The Life of Thomas Arnold the Younger (OUP, 2003)
  • A Study in Greene (OUP, 2006)

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Famous quotes containing the word works:

    A creative writer must study carefully the works of his rivals, including the Almighty. He must possess the inborn capacity not only of recombining but of re-creating the given world. In order to do this adequately, avoiding duplication of labor, the artist should know the given world.
    Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977)

    I look on trade and every mechanical craft as education also. But let me discriminate what is precious herein. There is in each of these works an act of invention, an intellectual step, or short series of steps taken; that act or step is the spiritual act; all the rest is mere repetition of the same a thousand times.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Most young black females learn to be suspicious and critical of feminist thinking long before they have any clear understanding of its theory and politics.... Without rigorously engaging feminist thought, they insist that racial separatism works best. This attitude is dangerous. It not only erases the reality of common female experience as a basis for academic study; it also constructs a framework in which differences cannot be examined comparatively.
    bell hooks (b. c. 1955)