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Great Writers Inspire

21 episodes - English - Latest episode: over 11 years ago - ★★★ - 166 ratings

PLEASE NOTE: The 'Great Writers Inspire' project has its own website which features much more extensive, diverse and updated content. Please visit https://writersinspires.org

From Dickens to Shakespeare, from Chaucer to Kipling and from Austen to Blake, this significant collection contains inspirational short talks freely available to the public and the education community worldwide. This series is aimed primarily at first year undergraduates but will be of interest to school students preparing for university and anyone who would like to know more about the world's great writers. The talks were produced as part of the Great Writers Inspire Project which makes a significant body of material freely available on the subject of great works of literature and their authors. Visit https://writersinspire.org/ to see how great writers can inspire you.

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Episodes

What is a Classic? English Graduate Conference 2012 Panel Debate, Talk 3

July 19, 2012 14:13 - 13 minutes - 92.5 MB Video

Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, draws on her experience as a trustee of the Booker Prize and as a judge for many other literary prizes to offer a response to the question, 'What is a Classic?'.

What is a Classic? English Graduate Conference 2012 Panel Debate, Talk 2

July 19, 2012 11:35 - 6 minutes - 43.6 MB Video

Judith Luna, the Senior Commissioning Editor at Oxford World's Classics, draws on her practical involvement in re-launching the Oxford World's Classics series in 2008 to give a publisher's take on the question, 'What is a Classic?'.

What is a Classic? English Graduate Conference 2012 Panel Debate, Talk 1

July 19, 2012 11:13 - 19 minutes - 144 MB Video

Dr Ankhi Mukherjee, Wadham college, Oxford, speaks to the question 'What is a Classic?' by examining the residual influence of the Eurocentric literary canon in the age of world literature and emergent formations of canons and classics.

Jane Austen's Manuscripts Explored

June 08, 2012 14:07 - 9 minutes - 65.9 MB Video

Professor Kathyrn Sutherland from the University of Oxford talks around the manuscripts of Jane Austen, what we can learn from them about her family life but also her writing style and techniques.

The Watsons: Jane Austen Practising

June 08, 2012 14:00 - 27 minutes - 195 MB Video

Professor Kathryn Sutherland from the University of Oxford talks about some of Jane Austen's manuscripts from the novel "The Watsons" and what we can learn about her from these.

Great Writers Inspire- An Introduction to the Project

May 23, 2012 10:48 - 46 seconds - 6.22 MB Video

A short introductory video to the "Great Writers Inspire project.

What is a Great Writer? An academic panel discusses the question.

May 15, 2012 16:38 - 48 minutes - 312 MB Video

In this panel discussion from the Great Writers Inspire Engage Event workshop, Dr Seamus Perry, Dr Margaret Kean, Professor Peter McDonald and Dr Ankhi Mukherjee discuss what we mean when we talk about greatness in writing. Seamus Perry chooses Samuel Taylor Coleridge, inspired as he is by the 'Rime of the Ancient Mariner' and its myriad possible interpretations. Margaret Kean chooses John Milton, who used his Paradise Lost to position himself in the canon of great writers during his lifetime...

Chaucer

April 17, 2012 15:16 - 14 minutes - 101 MB Video

Professor Daniel Wakelin discusses the work of Chaucer and explains how he was one of the first to use everyday spoken English as a literary language in the 14th Century.

Ezra Pound

April 10, 2012 12:09 - 15 minutes - 103 MB Video

Dr Rebecca Beasley explains why we should read Pound, someone she considers as the central figure in early 20th Century poetry movements. In this podcast, Rebecca Beasley talks about a poem that Pound published in Blast, the magazine of the vorticist movement -- which Pound joined in 1914. Vorticism was mainly a visual arts movement, founded by Percy Wyndham Lewis. Blast is available on the Modernist Journals Project website with certain usage restrictions: the poem discussed, Et Faim Sallir ...

Mary Leapor

March 27, 2012 18:07 - 12 minutes - 83.9 MB Video

Dr Jennifer Batt talks about Mary Leapor, an 18th Century kitchen maid who wrote accomplished verses and won accolades from literary society.

John Milton

March 15, 2012 12:26 - 18 minutes - 137 MB Video

Dr Anna Beer shares a few short extracts of Milton's poem Lycidas and discusses what they show about Milton's very special qualities as a writer.

Only Collect: An Introduction to the World of the Poetic Miscellany

March 09, 2012 16:01 - 13 minutes - 97.5 MB Video

Dr Abigail Williams, Director of the Digital Miscellanies Index, explains how these popular collections of poetry designed to suit contemporary tastes were used in the 18th Century.

J.M. Coetzee

February 07, 2012 13:56 - 12 minutes - 95.1 MB Video

Professor Peter McDonald gives a talk on the work of South African Nobel Laureate, J.M. Coetzee. Professor McDonald sets out the various less-than-great guises of the writer in Coetzee's fiction. He goes on to consider passages from Foe (1986) and Disgrace (1999) to highlight Coetzee's linguistic disruptiveness that might be considered traits of postmodern or post-colonial writing. In these close readings, Professor McDonald demonstrates how in just a few words, we can see that J.M. Coetzee i...

Olive Schreiner

February 07, 2012 13:54 - 11 minutes - 104 MB Video

Professor Elleke Boehmer gives a talk on Olive Schreiner (1855-1920), the South African novelist, pioneering feminist, and anti-imperialist polemicist. For Boehmer, Schreiner is not 'great' in the conventional sense (she did not possess the great literary brain of George Eliot, for example), but she is a great inspiration in many spheres: she influenced other writers (fellow South African J.M. Coetzee, in particular); other critical thinkers and activists (including John A. Hobson and Vladimi...

Katherine Mansfield and Rhythm Magazine

February 07, 2012 13:51 - 20 minutes - 149 MB Video

Dr Faith Binckes explains why modernist short story writer and critic Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923) is a great writer, highlighting her involvement with the 1911-1913 periodical Rhythm, edited by her second husband John Middleton Murry. Dr Binckes discusses how three stories from 1912 - 'The Woman at the Store', 'How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped', and 'Sunday Lunch' - illustrate different facets of Mansfield's writing. Though she has in the past been considered a domestic writer of women's an...

George Eliot - A Very Large Brain

February 07, 2012 13:46 - 11 minutes - 81.1 MB Video

Dr Catherine Brown gives a talk on George Eliot and her influences.

William Blake

February 07, 2012 13:43 - 12 minutes - 90.7 MB Video

Dr David Fallon introduces the poetry, painting, and engraving of William Blake, focusing on the imaginative and visionary aspects of Blake's work and his desire to break the publics 'mind-forg'd manacles'. Dr Fallon also highlights Blake's exposure to the political radicalism of the 1780s and 90s through his work as an engraver for the Unitarian publisher Joseph Johnson. Blake's unorthodox Christianity led him to challenge conventional notions of good and evil in his visionary 'The Marriage ...

18th Century Labouring Class Poetry

February 07, 2012 13:41 - 10 minutes - 75.7 MB Video

Dr Jennifer Batt gives a talk on Stephen Duck, one of the 18th Century labouring-class poets.

Jonathan Swift and the Art of Undressing

February 07, 2012 13:38 - 11 minutes - 81.3 MB Video

Dr Abigail Williams gives a talk on Jonathan Swift and the Art of Undressing.

Beowulf

February 07, 2012 13:35 - 12 minutes - 91.4 MB Video

Dr Francis Leneghan gives a talk on Beowulf, one of the most important works in Anglo-Saxon literature. The title of this collaborative project, 'Great Writers Inspire', naturally brings up several questions, most importantly of which is, 'What is a Writer?' In his talk on the Old English poem Beowulf, Francis Leneghan discusses that very concern. The term 'author' does not convey the same static quality in the Anglo-Saxon period as it does in the modern day. Beowulf could have existed in a m...

Shakespeare and the Stage

February 07, 2012 13:32 - 15 minutes - 110 MB Video

Professor Tiffany Stern gives a talk on William Shakespeare and how his plays were performed in Elizabethan England.