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Jeremy Tambling ''B.A'', ''M.Phil'', ''PhD'' (18 February 1948) is a British writer and critic. He was Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Hong Kong until 2006 and then Professor of Literature at the University of Manchester until December 2013. He has won a number of awards for his scholarship including research grants for his work on Blake, Dante, and Henry James and is a recurring face on the conference scene; four times on Dickens in 2012. Tambling’s literary interests range from Boccaccio to Kafka, Chaucer to Cinema. More specifically he has published books on Blake, Dickens and the nineteenth-century and cities within literature. Publication of his book ''Opera and the Culture of Fascism'' (1996) was met by a number of distressed voices from the operatic world(); possibly due to the book’s suggestion of a complicity from the industry with fascist ideology. ==Education/Teaching== Jeremy Tambling spent much of his youth in South-East London, at Dulwich College. He received his Bachelor of Arts ''(BA)'' from the University of York in 1969, where a major influence was Dr F.R. Leavis. He completed his ''M.Phil'' at the University of Nottingham in “The Intellectual and Cultural Milieu of Dickens’s Novels” in 1973, and his ''PhD'' at Essex University in “Vo significando: The Heuristic Art of Dante’s Commedia” in 1985. Tambling has a broad background in teaching ranging from Comprehensive Schools in England to lecturing, and then Professorship in Comparative Literature, at the University of Hong Kong, a position he held for over 18 years. He is interested in education at all levels, is a prison-visitor, and likes critical approaches which question disciplinary limits in the humanities and social sciences. 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「Jeremy Tambling」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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