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17 Normal Scholarship
Get accessProfessor Emeritus of Intellectual History and English Literature
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Published:March 2025
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Abstract
This chapter surveys some of the substratum of pattern and routine that underwrote developments in the discipline in the first four decades of the twentieth century. It indicates the modest scale of universities in Britain in those years and the increasing prominence of English within them. It compares the position of English as a subject in the USA in these decades, and it explains the establishment of the PhD, pointing to the beginnings of regular career progression. There is a close examination of The Review of English Studies, highlighting the dominance of minute historical scholarship in the medieval and early modern periods, as well as analyses of The Year’s Work in English Studies. There is also discussion of the question of how far in these years one can speak of ‘an academic public’ for works of scholarship, both books and the continuing number of less specialized journals. H. J. C. Grierson and C. S. Lewis are selected to illustrate the continuing presence of distinguished work that displayed a highly traditional conception of the subject right through this period.
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