Jump to content

John Carey (critic)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Carey
Professor John Carey
Professor John Carey
Born(1934-04-05)5 April 1934(age 90)
Barnes, London
OccupationLiterary critic
LanguageEnglish
NationalityBritish
Alma materSt John's College, Oxford
Notable worksWhat Good are the Arts?
SpouseGill (1960–present)
ChildrenLeo & Thomas
Website
www.johncarey.org

John Carey,FBA,FRSL(born 5 April 1934) is a British literary critic, and post-retirement (2002) emeritusMerton Professor of English Literatureat theUniversity of Oxford.He is known for his anti-elitist views onhigh culture,as expounded in several books. He has twice chaired theBooker Prizecommittee, in 1982 and 2003, and chaired the judging panel for the firstMan Booker International Prizein 2005.

Education and career

[edit]

He was born inBarnes,London, and educated atRichmond and East Sheen Boys' Grammar School,winning an Open Scholarship toSt John's College, Oxford.He has held posts in a number of Oxford colleges, and is an emeritus fellow ofMerton,where he became a professor in 1975, retiring in 2002.[1]

Literary criticism

[edit]

Carey's scholarly work is generally agreed to be of the highest order and greatly influential. Among these productions is his co-edition, with Alastair Fowler, of thePoems of John Milton(Longman, 1968; revised 1980; 2nd ed. 2006);John Donne: Life, Mind, and Art(Faber and Faber, 1981; revised 1990), a revolutionary study of Donne's work in the light of his life and family history; andThe Violent Effigy: A Study of Dickens's Imagination(1973; 2nd ed. 1991).

He has twice chaired theBooker Prizecommittee, in 1982 and 2004, and chaired the judging panel for the firstMan Booker International Prizein 2005. Since 1977, he has been the chief book reviewer for the LondonSunday Timesand appears in radio and TV programmes includingSaturday ReviewandNewsnight Review.

Views

[edit]

He is known for his anti-elitist views onhigh culture,as expressed for example in his bookWhat Good Are the Arts?(2005). Carey's 1992 bookThe Intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice among the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880–1939was a critique ofModernistwriters (particularlyT. S. Eliot,Virginia Woolf,W. B. Yeats,D. H. LawrenceandH. G. Wells) for what Carey argues were their elitist and misanthropic views ofmass society;in their place he called for a reappraisal ofArnold Bennett,'the hero of this book', whose 'writings represent a systematic dismemberment of the intellectuals' case against the masses'.[2]In his review of the bookGeoff Dyerwrote that Carey picked out negative quotations from his subjects, whileStefan Colliniresponded that disdain for mass culture among some Modernist writers was already well-known among literary historians.[3]

Memoir

[edit]

In 2014, he published a memoirThe Unexpected Professor.It comprised distinct parts; childhood in wartime and the era of rationing, schooling, national service in the army; the academic career and scholarly study; his later period of book reviewing and literary journalism.

The early career described his first encounters with poetry, among themMilton,Jonson,Donne,Browning.The book contained crisp critical summaries of prose writers, among themThackeray,LawrenceandOrwell.[4]

Personal

[edit]

Carey was born in April 1934 inBarnes,then on the Surrey/London border, the youngest of their four recorded children, to Charles W. Carey and Winifred E. Carey, née Cook.[5]He was for decades abeekeeper.

Works

[edit]
  • The Poems ofJohn Milton(1968) editor withAlastair Fowler
  • Andrew Marvell:A Critical Anthology(1969) editor
  • The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner by James Hogg(1969) editor
  • John Milton(1969)
  • Complete Shorter Poems of John Milton(1971), revised 2nd edition (1997) editor
  • The Violent Effigy. A Study of Dickens' Imagination(1973) published in America asHere Comes Dickens. The Imagination of a Novelist.Republished in Faber Finds (2008)
  • John Milton, Christian Doctrine(1971) translator
  • Thackeray:Prodigal Genius(1977) republished inFaber Finds(2008)
  • English Renaissance Studies: Presented To Dame Helen Gardner In Honour Of Her Seventieth Birthday(1979)
  • John Donne:Life, Mind and Art(1981) new revised edition (1990) republished inFaber Finds(2008)
  • William Golding:The Man and His Books(1986) editor
  • Faber Book of Reportage(1987) editor. Published in America asEyewitness to History,Harvard University Press,(1987)
  • Original Copy: Selected Reviews and Journalism 1969–1986(1987)
  • John Donne. The Major Works(1990) editor, Oxford Authors, reprinted with revisions (2000) World's Classics
  • The Intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice among the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880–1939(1992)
  • Short Stories and the Unbearable Bassington by Saki(1994) editor
  • Faber Book of Science(1995) editor. Published in America asEyewitness to Science: Scientists and Writers Illuminate Natural Phenomena from Fossils to Fractals,Harvard University Press, (1997)
  • Selected Poetry of John Donne(1998) editor
  • Faber Book of Utopias(2000) editor
  • Pure Pleasure: a Guide to the Twentieth Century's Most Enjoyable Books(2000)
  • George Orwell,Essays(2002) editor and introduction:xv-xxxi. Knopf
  • Vanity Fairby William Thackeray(2002) editor
  • What Good are the Arts?(2005)
  • William Golding: The Man Who Wrote 'Lord of the Flies'(2009)
  • The Unexpected Professor: An Oxford Life in Books(2014)
  • The Essential 'Paradise Lost'(2017)
  • A Little History of Poetry,Yale University Press (2020)
  • 100 Poets: A Little Anthology,Yale University Press (2021)
  • Sunday Best: 80 Great Books from a Lifetime of Reviews,Yale University Press (2022)

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Professor John Carey, MA, DPhil, FBA, FRSL".Merton.ox.ac.uk.Archived fromthe originalon 18 May 2015.Retrieved30 January2016.
  2. ^Carey, John (1992).The intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice among the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880-1939.Faber and Faber. p. 152.ISBN0-571-16926-0.
  3. ^Collini, Stefan(1999). "With Friends Like These: John Carey and Noel Annan".English Pasts: Essays in History and Culture.Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp.298–303.ISBN0-19-158890-3.
  4. ^Colllni, Steffan (27 February 2014)."The Unexpected Professor review – the puzzle of John Carey".The Guardian.
  5. ^"Index entry".FreeBMD.ONS.Retrieved31 March2014.
[edit]