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ISBN 921870-71-X
5 3/4 x 9
32 pp, saddle stiched, $8.95
Literature
History
Education

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Professing English at UBC:The
Legacy of Roy Daniells and Garnett Sedgewick
By Sandra Djwa
In her University of BC
Sedgewick Lecture for 1999, Sandra Djwa relates the life and
times of two illustrious professors of English, who were
among the most influential teachers in Canada's history.
From the 1920s to the 1970s, Garnett Sedgewick and Roy
Daniells shaped the way tens of thousands of students
experienced literature. Sedgewick, the first Head of UBC's
English Department, was renowned for his reading
Shakespeare's plays with such intensity that one could
believe Falstaff or Rosalind stood beside the lectern.
Daniells was equally famous for his lectures on Milton, in
which Milton's epic vision and baroque splendour became felt
presences in the classroom — even at 9:30 a.m. on a rainy
Vancouver day. In her discussion of the Earle Birney-Roy
Daniells feud, Djwa sheds new light on that battle of
titans.
Djwa also extends her
research beyond the personalities of Sedgewick and Daniells
to discuss how both men participated in the development of
an ideal of the humanities in Canadian universities. Indeed,
this lecture, complete with photos, is a contribution to the
developing history of the Canadian university.
Professor Djwa is the
author of E.J. Pratt: The Evolutionary Vision and a
biography of F. R. Scott, The Politics of the Imagination
(1987). She has edited Karl Klinck's memoirs, Karl Klinck:
Giving Canada a Literary History (1991). Her biography of
Roy Daniells is forthcoming from the University of Toronto
Press, and she is now beginning a biography of P.K. Page.
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