Jerome McGann

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Jerome John McGann (born July 22, 1937) is an American academic and textual scholar whose work focuses on the history of literature and culture from the late eighteenth-century to the present.

Career

Educated at Le Moyne College (B.S. 1959), Syracuse University (M.A. 1962) and Yale University (Ph.D., 1966), McGann currently teaches at the University of Virginia (1986–present), where he arrived after leaving Caltech.

McGann is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has received honorary doctoral degrees from University of Chicago (1996) and University of Athens (2009). Other awards include: Melville Cane Award, American Poetry Society, 1973, for his work on Swinburne as "The Year's Best Critical Book about Poetry"; Distinguished Scholar Award from the Keats-Shelley Association of America (1989); Distinguished Scholar Award from the Byron Society of America, 1989; and the Wilbur Cross Medal, Yale University Graduate School, 1994.

In 2002 he was the recipient of three major awards: the Richard W. Lyman Award for Distinguished Contributions to Humanities Computing, National Humanities Center (first award recipient); the James Russell Lowell Award (from the Modern Language Association) for Radiant Textuality as the Most Distinguished Scholarly Book of the Year; and the Mellon Foundation Distinguished Achievement Award.

He has been a Fulbright Fellow (1965–66), an American Philosophical Society Fellow (1967) and Guggenheim Fellow (1970–71, 1976–77) and has been awarded NEH grants in 1975-76, 1987–89, 2003–2006, as well as grants from the Getty Foundation, the Delmas Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation. He has held more than a dozen other appointments, including President, Society for Textual Scholarship, 1995–1997; and President, Society for Critical Exchange, 2005-6. Since 1999 he has been a Senior Research Fellow, Institute of English Studies, University of London and since 2000 a Senior Research Fellow, University College, London.[1]

Academic Work

McGann's most notable works were the two books published in 1983, The Romantic Ideology and A Critique of Modern Textual Criticism. McGann has also written four books of poetry including Air Heart Sermons (1976) and Four Last Poems (1996), both published by Pasdeloup Press in Canada. In 1993, McGann began his The Rossetti Archive (1993–2008). He is also the founder of the Applied Research in Patacriticism digital laboratory, which includes such software projects as IVANHOE and NINES.

Personal life

McGann has been married since 1960 (to Anne Lanni) and has three children (born 1963, 1965, 1967)

External links

Selected bibliography

  • Fiery Dust: Byron's Poetic Development. University of Chicago Press, 1969
  • Swinburne: An Experiment in Criticism. University of Chicago Press, 1972
  • The Romantic Ideology: A Critical Investigation. University of Chicago Press, 1983
  • A Critique of Modern Textual Criticism. University of Chicago Press, 1983
  • The Beauty of Inflections: Literary Investigations in Historical Method and Theory. Clarendon Press, 1985
  • Social Values and Poetic Acts. Harvard U. Press, 1987
  • Towards a Literature of Knowledge. Oxford U. Press and U. of Chicago Press, 1989
  • The Textual Condition. Princeton U. Press, 1991
  • Black Riders: The Visible Language of Modernism. Princeton UP, 1993
  • Byron: The Complete Poetical Works, ed. with Introduction, Apparatus, and Commentaries. 7 Vols. Clarendon Press, The Oxford English Texts series, 1980–1993
  • Poetics of Sensibility. A Revolution in Literary Style. Oxford UP, 1996
  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the Game that Must be Lost. Yale UP, 2000
  • Radiant Textuality. Literature Since the World Wide Web. Palgrave/St Martins, 2001
  • Byron and Romanticism. Cambridge University Press, 2002
  • Algernon Charles Swinburne. Major Poems and Selected Prose. Yale UP, 2004
  • The Scholar's Art. Literary Studies in a Managed World. U. of Chicago Press, 2006
  • The Point is to Change It. Poetry and Criticism in the Continuing Present. U. of Alabama Press, 2007
  • Stephen Crane's The Black Riders and other lines, ed. with Afterword. Rice UP, Literature by Design series, 2009
  • Byron's Manfred. Pasdeloup Press, 2009
  • Are the Humanities Inconsequent? An Interpretation of Marx's Riddle of the Dog. Prickly Paradigm Press, 2009
  • Online Humanities Scholarship. The Shape of Things to Come, ed. with an Introduction. Rice UP, 2010
  • A New Republic of Letters. Memory and Scholarship in the Age of Digital Reproduction. Harvard University Press, 2014

References

  1. Jerome McGann Homepage at the University of Virginia