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Eric Griffiths, 1953-2018

Tributes paid to Cambridge literary critic

Published on
November 8, 2018
Last updated
November 8, 2018
Eric Griffiths
Source: Ruth MacKenzie

A famously incisive and combative literary critic has died.

Eric Griffiths was born into a Welsh-speaking family in Liverpool聽in 1953 and was educated at the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys. He studied at Pembroke College, Cambridge (1971-74) and, after a year at Princeton University, returned to Cambridge for a PhD on 鈥淲riting and speaking in the work of Eliot, Yeats and Pound鈥. He went on to spend his whole career at Cambridge and was appointed a teaching fellow at Trinity College in 1980, where he remained until he took early retirement in 2011聽as a result of a stroke.

A hugely popular lecturer Dr Griffiths was the author of The Printed Voice of Victorian Poetry聽(1989) and the editor of Dante in English (with Matthew Reynolds, 2005). A selection of his unpublished lectures was published as If Not Critical (edited by Freya Johnston) earlier this year.

His reviews were celebrated for their acerbic wit. Terry Eagleton was once dismissed as 鈥渁 pith-artist鈥 for his 鈥渜uick-fire summary of issues and thinkers鈥. Yet Dr Griffiths was quite unrepentant,聽

George Yeats, lecturer in English literature at Regent's University London, described Dr Griffiths as 鈥渃aring, inspiring and endlessly entertaining鈥 and said that he聽鈥 like 鈥渃ountless other Cambridge students turned teachers鈥 鈥 would remember him as 鈥渢he sharpest thinker and finest supervisor we ever met. In my memories of lectures, I see overflowing halls on the Sidgwick site where we hung from the rafters and on to his words. In tutorials, his occasionally cutting remarks were the flip side of the utterly scrupulous acuity that he brought to reading student work of all levels.

鈥淗is range of mind was simply extraordinary,鈥 Dr Yeats went on. 鈥淭o paraphrase Sherlock Holmes on his brother Mycroft 鈥 all other lecturers were specialists, but his specialism was omniscience. His expertise spanned the supposed boundaries between periods, art forms (prose, drama and poetry), languages (English, French, Italian and German), and disciplines (theology, linguistics, philosophy and of course literature)鈥n the podium, around the tutorial table, or 鈥 after the supervision had ended 鈥 over a drink, he was at once an intimidatingly brilliant intellect and yet, like his much-loved Shakespearean namesake [Yorick], 鈥榓 fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy鈥.鈥

Dr Griffiths died on 26 September.

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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