Jump to content

Clifford Leech

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Grantsky (talk | contribs) at 19:48, 4 January 2011 (Life). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Clifford Leech (1909–1977[1]) was a prolifically published British-born professor of English at University College at the University of Toronto 1963-74.[2] His contribution to Christopher Marlowe studies was considered "historically important."[3] In Canada he was considered a "distinguished scholar."[4] His publications mainly concerned Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists, including William Shakespeare, John Webster and John Ford. He also wrote a book on American playwright Eugene O'Neill. Leech's published reviews include one on a Canadian play, The Last of the Tsars, produced at Stratford, Ontario in 1966 on the subject of the last Russian czar.[5]

Leech was a scholarly colleague of Northrop Frye.

Life

He obtained his M.A. at the University of London in 1932 with an essay on the poet Thomas Southerne.[6] His doctoral thesis at the University of London was "Private performances and amateur theatricals (excluding the academic stage) from 1580 to 1660" (1935).[7] In 1955 Leech became a university lecturer at the University of Durham, remaining until at least 1962. In 1964 he succeeded A. S. P. Woodhouse as chairman of the Department of English at University College at the University of Toronto. In 1971 he gave up being general editor of the Revels Plays, a series he had conceived in the mid-1950s in imitation of the New Arden Shakespeare, applying that edition's methods of scholarship to other (mostly earlier) plays. Leech turned over the Revels Plays to F. David Hoeniger.[8]

Publications

Leech's earliest published works were many essays and articles for scholarly periodicals. Later, he edited his own and others' essays into published collections.

  • Shakespeare's Tragedies, and Other Studies in Seventeenth Century Drama (1950)
  • "Webster as a Dramatic Poet" (essay), in John Webster: A Critical Study (1951)
  • John Ford and the Drama of His Time (1957)
  • "History for the Elizabethans" (essay), in Shakespeare: A Chronicle (1962)
  • The John Fletcher Plays (1962)
  • John Ford (1963)
  • O'Neill (1963)
  • Webster: The Duchess of Malfi (1963)
  • "When writing becomes absurd" and "The acting of Shakespeare and Marlowe": two addresses (1964)
  • "Shakespeare's Greeks" (essay), in Stratford Papers on Shakespeare, edited by B. W. Jackson (1964)
  • Marlowe: A Collection of Critical Essays (1964)
  • Shakespeare: The Tragedies: a Collection of Critical Essays, ed. by C. Leech (1965)
  • Essays on Marlowe, ed. by C. Leech (1965)
  • Tragedy (1969)
  • The Dramatist's Experience, with other essays in literary theory (1970)
  • "On Editing One's First Play" (article), Studies in Bibliography (1970)
  • The Revels History of Drama in English (with T. W. Craik; 1975)
  • Christopher Marlowe: Poet for the Stage, ed. by Anne Lancashire (1986)
  • "The Moral Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet" (essay), Critical Essays on Romeo and Juliet, ed. Joseph A. Porter (1997)

Leech also contributed essays to numerous volumes of Shakespeare Survey, including volumes one, three, six, seven, eight, nine, eleven, twelve, and twenty-six. His contributions deal with the meaning of Measure for Measure, with Shakespeare's style and language, the playwright himself, the comedies, and Hamlet.

Notes

  1. ^ catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/1940849
  2. ^ http://www.britannica.com/shakespeare/author?id=1716
  3. ^ assets.cambridge.org/97805218/.../9780521820349_frontmatter.pdf
  4. ^ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_of_the_Tsars
  5. ^ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_of_the_Tsars
  6. ^ http://openlibrary.org/works/OL1313109W/The_life_and_works_of_Thomas_Southerne
  7. ^ http://openlibrary.org/works/OL1313113W/Private_performances_and_amateur_theatricals_%28excluding_the_academic_stage%29_from_1580_to_1660
  8. ^ rpo.library.utoronto.ca/display_rpo/edition/hoeniger.html