Nicholas Watson (academic)
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Nicholas Watson is an English-Canadian medievalist, literary critic, religious historian, and author. He is Henry B. and Anne M. Cabot Professor of English at Harvard University and chair of the Harvard English Department.[1][2]
Education and early career
Nicholas Watson was raised in Winchester, England.[3] After an undergraduate education at the University of Cambridge and graduate work with Vincent Gillespie at Oxford, he began his scholarly career with a 1987 dissertation at the University of Toronto on the Yorkshire hermit Richard Rolle.[3] Watson is Henry B. and Anne M. Cabot Professor of English at Harvard; before joining the faculty at Harvard he taught at the University of Western Ontario from 1990 to 2001.[4]
Career
Watson has written on vernacularity, gender, religious censorship, ritual magic, and mystical literature; he has also edited and translated important works from medieval Latin and Middle English. He is credited with introducing the concept of "vernacular theology" to literary and religious studies.[5] His scholarship has explored figures such as Julian of Norwich, William Langland, Marguerite Porete, Geoffrey Chaucer, John of Morigny, Richard Rolle, the Pearl Poet, and Archbishop Thomas Arundel.[3]
Awards
In 1990 he was awarded the John Charles Polanyi Prize.[6] His research has been supported by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Guggenheim Foundation,[7] the American Council of Learned Societies,[8] and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.[9] In 2016 he was named a Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America.
Works
- Richard Rolle and the Invention of Authority (1991)
- (with Anne Savage) Anchoritic Spirituality: Ancrene Wisse and Associated Works (1991)
- "Censorship and Cultural Change in Late-Medieval England: Vernacular Theology, the Oxford Translation Debate, and Arundel's Constitutions of 1409" (1995)
- Richard Rolle: Emendatio vitae and Orationes ad honorem nominis Ihesu (1995)
- (with Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Andrew Taylor, and Ruth Evans) The Idea of the Vernacular: an Anthology of Middle English Literary Theory, 1280-1520 (1999)
- "The Middle English Mystics" in The Cambridge History of Medieval English Literature, ed. David Wallace (1999)
- (with Fiona Somerset) The Vulgar Tongue: Medieval and Postmedieval Vernacularity (2003)
- (with Jacqueline Jenkins) The Writings of Julian of Norwich: A Vision Showed to a Devout Woman and A Revelation of Love (2006)
- (with Fiona Somerset) Truth and Tales: Cultural Mobility and Medieval Media (2015)
References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
- American literary critics
- American medievalists
- Canadian medievalists
- British medievalists
- Harvard University faculty
- Living people
- Chaucer scholars
- 20th-century American writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- University of Toronto alumni
- English historians
- Year of birth missing (living people)
- Fellows of the Medieval Academy of America