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David Pollard (born 2 July 1942, London) is a British author. ==Biography== Pollard was born under a bed during The Blitz in 1942 and brought up a Londoner. After working in the furniture trade and serving his articles in accountancy, he escaped to the University of Sussex where he was given his three degrees in English Literature, the History of Ideas and Philosophy. The last of these, a doctorate, was awarded on his fortieth birthday and was published as ‘The Poetry of Keats: Language and Experience’ and is a Heideggerian approach to the poet. Heidegger's late critiques of the German poets Hölderlin, Mörike and Rilke are applied here for the first time to an English poet. Pollard has worked at the Universities of Essex and Sussex and spent a year at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem as a Lady Davis Scholar. He edited the KWIC Concordance to Keats’ Letters based on the Rider K. Rollins edition published by Harvard University Press. He has also published on Blake and Nietzsche, his latest being a novel, ‘Nietzsche’s Footfalls’, a meditation on the philosopher and his times, his relation to his sister and Nazism and especially to Wagner. Pollard has published four volumes of poetry, 'patricides', 'Risk of Skin', 'Self-Portraits' (Waterloo Press) and 'bedbound' (Perdika Press). He is currently working on a historical novel based at the end of the first century and a text on Shakespeare which he considers a lifelong task. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「David Pollard (author)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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