![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
| Home | About this site | Author index | Awards and prizes | News | Events |
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
Hermione LeeHermione Lee
Back |
Genres |
Bibliography |
Prizes and awards |
Critical perspective  
BiographyCritic and biographer Hermione Lee was born in Winchester, England in 1948 and grew up in London. After graduating from Oxford University, she lectured in America and taught at the Universities of Liverpool and York. She is Goldsmiths' Professor of English Literature and Fellow of New College, Oxford. A judge for the Booker Prize for Fiction in 1981, Hermione Lee presented Channel 4 Television's first book programme, 'Book Four', between 1982 and 1984 and is a regular broadcaster for BBC radio. She is also a regular reviewer for various newspapers and magazines, including the Observer and the Times Literary Supplement.
Her latest book is Edith Wharton (2008), shortlisted for the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for biography).    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Biography, Criticism, Literary criticism, Non-fiction     BibliographyLiterature of the Romantic Period (contributor) Liverpool University Press, 1976 The Novels of Virginia Woolf Methuen, 1977 Elizabeth Bowen: An Estimation (new edition published by Vintage, 1999) Vision, 1981 Philip Roth Methuen, 1982 Stevie Smith: A Selection (editor) Faber and Faber, 1983 The Duke's Children (editor) Oxford University Press, 1983 The Secret Self: Short Stories by Women (editor) Dent, 1985 The Mulberry Tree: Writings of Elizabeth Bowen (editor) Virago, 1986 Three Guineas (editor) Hogarth, 1986 The Secret Self 2: Short Stories by Women (editor) Dent, 1987 Traffics and Discoveries Penguin, 1987 The Short Stories of Willa Cather (editor) Virago, 1989 Willa Cather: A Life Saved Up Virago, 1989 A Room of One's Own (editor) Hogarth, 1992 The Years (editor) Oxford University Press, 1992 Virginia Woolf: A Biography Chatto & Windus, 1996 Oxford Poets 2000: An Anthology (editor with David Constantine and Bernard O'Donoghue) Carcanet, 2000 Reading in Bed (Oxford Inaugural Lectures series) Oxford University Press, 2000 Oxford Poets 2001 (editor with David Constantine and Bernard O'Donoghue) Carcanet, 2001 Body Parts: Essays on Life Writing Chatto & Windus, 2005 Edith Wharton Chatto & Windus, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1997 Rose Mary Crawshay Prize for English Literature (British Academy) Virginia Woolf 2003 CBE 2008 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for biography) (shortlist) Edith Wharton    
  Critical PerspectiveIn a period when contemporary literary criticism has become increasingly specialised, isolating itself from those outside the academy, Hermoine Lee's work has continued to attract both popular and academic audiences. Lee's biographical, editorial and critical work is impressive both in terms of its scholarly rigor and its ability to translate and render compelling the esoteric, notoriously 'difficult' writers and works of high modernism. Lee works across a range of media, notably as a reviewer and contributor to The Observer (between 1982 and 1986) and as the presenter of Channel 4's pioneering book review programme, 'Book Four'.
Shifting the emphasis from reading to writing, Lee has more recently published a collection of 18 essays, lectures and reviews, Body Parts: Essays on Life-Writing (2005). The volume addresses one of the key dilemmas of the biographer: how to deal with the gaps, uncertainties and absences that inevitably emerge between the documents left over from a life? As Lee summarized it in an interview in 2006: 'You can never have a complete, consecutive, polished narrative because there’s so much you don’t know. I don’t think biography can become a completely relativist, amorphous, querying form, it’s got to keep its tapeworm of story and chronology and so on.' By turns informative and entertaining, the collection covers everything from Shelley’s heart (sandwiched between pages of a book) to Virginia Woolf’s nose (or at least the prosthetic version worn by actress Nicole Kidman in The Hours).
With her latest biography, Edith Wharton (2008), Lee has further extended her reputation as a chronicler of the lives of early 20th-century women. This 853-page study has received almost universal critical acclaim, and in the Financial Times, John Sutherland wrote: 'Anyone embarking on a reading of Wharton will deny themselves full appreciation if they do not consult Lee, whose biography is now the necessary accompaniment.' The biography (the first by a British author) contributes a more nuanced understanding of Wharton’s European life than has hitherto been available. It also breaks new ground in revealing Wharton as a writer more in touch with modernity and sexuality, less genteel and nostalgic than had been previously thought.
 
  Contact information
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The British Council is registered in England as a charity. Our privacy statement. Our Freedom of Information Publications Scheme. |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
| Developed and hosted by Artlogic Media Ltd London. | |||||||||