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19 The English Association
Get accessProfessor Emeritus of Intellectual History and English Literature
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Published:March 2025
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Abstract
The establishment of the English Association (EA) in 1906–7 reflected both the growing importance of the subject and a sense that work needed to be done to promote it. The EA attempted to bring together schoolteachers, academic scholars, and a general interested public, with a sprinkling of notables to add social cachet. It had an extensive programme of meetings and publications in its first two decades, as well as close links with the Board of Education. All this led to its being the major presence on the Newbolt Committee, appointed in 1919. Although schoolteachers may have provided the main readership of its publications, the academic scholars increasingly became the most frequent authors of them. The EA’s membership declined in the 1930s, and in 1936 its Bulletin was replaced by a more informal, eclectic journal, while after 1945 the academics played a diminishing part in its proceedings. Although it continued to be an active forum for those with an interest in the subject, it never recovered the prominence and influence it had had in its first two decades.
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