请登录

记住密码
注册

请登录

记住密码
注册

操作失败

duang出错啦~~

非常抱歉,

你要访问的页面不存在,

操作失败

Sorry~~

非常抱歉,

你要访问的页面不存在,

提示

duang~~

非常抱歉,

你要访问的页面不存在,

提示

验证码:

James A. Winn

职称:Professor;Director

所属学校:Boston University

所属院系:College of Arts & Sciences

所属专业:English/Language Arts Teacher Education

联系方式: 617-353-6250

简介

James A. Winn took his undergraduate degree at Princeton summa cum laude and received his Ph.D. from Yale, where he wrote his dissertation under Maynard Mack. He has taught at Yale (1974–1983), the University of Michigan (1983–1998), and Boston University (1998–present). He served as Chairman of the Department of English from 1998 until 2007, and has served since 2008 as Director of the Boston University Center for the Humanities. Winn’s scholarly work combines a deep commitment to the literature of England in the Restoration and early eighteenth century with a broad interest in the relations between literature and the other arts. His first book, A Window in the Bosom: The Letters of Alexander Pope (1977), was the first extended study of Pope’s correspondence; his second, Unsuspected Eloquence: A History of the Relations between Poetry and Music (1981) remains the only general study of its kind. His biography of Dryden, John Dryden and his World (1987), won the British Humanities Council Prize and the Yale University Press Governors’ Award; it led to a further study placing Dryden and others in the context of Restoration music, painting, and gender politics: “When Beauty Fires the Blood”: Love and the Arts in the Age of Dryden (1992). Winn has edited book-length collections of essays on Pope and Dryden, written articles on subjects as diverse as Milton, Faulkner, and the Beatles, and ventured polemical pieces on deconstruction, the new historicism, and the practice of tenure. His scholarly interest in music reflects his continuing career as a concert flutist, and he has an additional appointment in the Department of Musicology. Winn’s recent books have aimed at a wider audience. The Pale of Words: Reflections on the Humanities and Performance (Yale, 1998), is an expanded version of the James Murray Brown lectures, which he delivered at the University of Aberdeen in 1996. In this deliberately provocative book, Winn contends that the disciplines we call the humanities have identified themselves excessively with the written word. He exposes the hostility and fear with which writers and philosophers throughout Western history have regarded forms of expression not couched in words, despite the fact that much of what humanists study originates in performance. The Poetry of War (Cambridge, 2008), a book for general readers, is grounded in the belief that poetry tells the deepest truths about war. Drawing on poets from Homer to Bruce Springsteen, Winn shows how they express and question our personal reasons for fighting— honor, shame, comradeship, revenge—and how they shape and expose our corporate incentives for warfare—religion, empire, chivalry, freedom. In July 2014, Oxford University Press published Queen Anne: Patroness of Arts, Winn’s new royal biography. Research for this project was supported in 2008 by a grant from the American Council of Learned Societies, and in 2012–13 by grants from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. In this comprehensive interdisciplinary biography, richly illustrated with visual and musical examples, James Winn draws on works by Dryden, Pope, Purcell, Handel, Lely, Kneller, Wren, Vanbrugh, Addison, Swift, and many other artists to shed new light on the life and reign of Queen Anne (1665–1714).

职业经历

William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor, Bo ston University (2009 – ) Director, Boston University Humanities Center (2008 – ) Professor, Department of English, Boston University (1998 – ) Affiliated Faculty, Department of Musicology and Ethnomusicology, School of Music, College of Fine Arts, Boston University (2011 – ) Chair, Department of English, Boston University (1998 – 2007) Founding Director, University of Michigan Institute for the Humanities (1988 – 96) Mary Fair Croushore Professor of Humanities, University of Michigan (1992 – 96) Professor, Uni versity of Michigan School of Music (1992 – 98) Professor, University of Michigan Dept. of English (1985 – 98) Director of Graduate Studies, University of Michigan Dept. of English (1986 – 88) Associated Faculty, University of Michigan Program in Comparative Literature (1986 – 98) Associate Professor, University of Michigan Dept. of English (1983 – 85)A ssociate Professor, Yale University Dept. of English (1980 – 83); Assistant Professor(1974 – 80) Assistant to the Director of Admissions, Princeton University (1970 – 71)

该专业其他教授