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Harold Bloom

Harold Bloom (July 11, 1930 – October 14, 2019) was an American literary critic and the Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University.[1] In 2017, Bloom was called "probably the most famous literary critic in the English-speaking world."[2] After publishing his first book in 1959, Bloom wrote more than 50 books,[3] including over 40 books of literary criticism, several books discussing religion, and one novel. He edited hundreds of anthologies concerning numerous literary and philosophical figures for the Chelsea House publishing firm.[4][5] Bloom's books have been translated into more than 40 languages. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1995.[6]

Harold Bloom
Bloom in 1986
Born(1930-07-11)July 11, 1930
New York City, U.S.
DiedOctober 14, 2019(2019-10-14) (aged 89)
New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.
Occupation
EducationCornell University (BA)
Pembroke College, Cambridge
Yale University (MA, PhD)
Literary movementAestheticism, Romanticism
Years active1955–2019
Spouse
Jeanne Gould
(m. 1958)
Children2

Bloom was a defender of the traditional Western canon at a time when literature departments were focusing on what he derided as the "school of resentment" (multiculturalists, feminists, Marxists, and others).[7][8] He was educated at Yale University, the University of Cambridge, and Cornell University.

Early life and education edit

Bloom was born in New York City on July 11, 1930,[7] to Paula (née Lev) and William Bloom. He lived in the Bronx at 1410 Grand Concourse.[9][10] He was raised as an Orthodox Jew in a Yiddish-speaking household, where he learned literary Hebrew;[11] he learned English at the age of six.[12] Bloom's father, a garment worker, was born in Odesa and his Lithuanian Jewish mother, a homemaker, near Brest Litovsk in what is today Belarus.[11] Harold had three older sisters and an older brother. He was the last living sibling.[11]

As a boy, Bloom read Hart Crane's Collected Poems, a collection that inspired his lifelong fascination with poetry.[13] Bloom went to the Bronx High School of Science, where his grades were poor but his standardized-test scores were high.[14] In 1951 he received a B.A. degree in classics from Cornell, where he was a student of English literary critic M. H. Abrams, and in 1955 a PhD from Yale.[15] In 1954–55 Bloom was a Fulbright Scholar at Pembroke College, Cambridge.[16]

Bloom was a standout student at Yale, where he clashed with the faculty of New Critics, including William K. Wimsatt. Several years later Bloom dedicated his book The Anxiety of Influence to Wimsatt.[17]

Teaching career edit

Bloom was a member of the Yale English Department from 1955 to 2019, teaching his final class four days before his death.[7] He received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1985. From 1988 to 2004, Bloom was Berg Professor of English at New York University while maintaining his position at Yale. In 2010, he became a founding patron of Ralston College, a new institution in Savannah, Georgia, that focuses on primary texts.[18][19] Fond of endearments, Bloom addressed both male and female students and friends as "my dear".[7]

Personal life and death edit

Bloom married Jeanne Gould in 1958.[20] They had two children.[21] In a 2005 interview, Jeanne said that she and Harold were both atheists, which he denied: "No, no, I'm not an atheist. It's no fun being an atheist."[22]

Bloom was the subject of a 1990 article in GQ titled "Bloom in Love", which accused him of having affairs with female graduate students. He called the article a "disgusting piece of character assassination." Bloom's friend and colleague the biographer R. W. B. Lewis said in 1994 that Bloom's "wandering, I gather is a thing of the past. I hate to say it, but he rather bragged about it, so that wasn't very secret for a number of years."[23] In a 2004 article for New York magazine, Naomi Wolf wrote that while she was an undergraduate student at Yale University in 1983, Bloom attended a dinner with her, saying he would discuss her writing. Instead, she claims that he came on to her, placing his hand on her inner thigh.[24] Bloom "vigorously denied" the allegation.[7][25]

Bloom never retired from teaching, swearing that he would need to be removed from the classroom "in a great big body bag." He had open heart surgery in 2002 and broke his back after experiencing a fall in 2008.[21] He died at a hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, on October 14, 2019. He was 89 years old.[7]

Writing career edit

Defense of Romanticism edit

Bloom began his career with a sequence of highly regarded monographs on Percy Bysshe Shelley (Shelley's Myth-making, Yale University Press, originally Bloom's doctoral dissertation),[26] William Blake (Blake's Apocalypse, Doubleday), W. B. Yeats (Yeats, Oxford University Press),[27] and Wallace Stevens (Wallace Stevens: The Poems of Our Climate, Cornell University Press).[28] In these, he defended the High Romantics against neo-Christian critics influenced by such writers as T. S. Eliot, who became a recurring intellectual foil. Bloom had a contentious approach: his first book, Shelley's Myth-making, charged many contemporary critics with sheer carelessness in their reading of the poet.[citation needed]

Influence theory edit

 
A lion-faced deity associated with Gnosticism. Bloom frequently referred to Gnosticism when speaking about general and personal religious matters.

After a personal crisis during the late 1960s, Bloom became deeply interested in Ralph Waldo Emerson, Sigmund Freud, and the ancient mystic traditions of Gnosticism, Kabbalah, and Hermeticism. In a 2003 interview with Bloom, Michael Pakenham, the book editor for The Baltimore Sun, noted that Bloom had long called himself a "Jewish Gnostic". Bloom responded: "I am using 'Gnostic' in a very broad way. I am nothing if not Jewish... I really am a product of Yiddish culture. But I can't understand a Yahweh, or a God, who could be all-powerful and all-knowing and would allow the Nazi death camps and schizophrenia."[29] Influenced by his reading, he began a series of books that focused on the way in which poets struggle to create their individual poetic visions without being overcome by the influence of the poets who inspired them to write.

The first of these books, Yeats, challenged the conventional critical view of William Butler Yeats's poetic career. In the introduction to this volume, Bloom set out the basic principles of his new approach to criticism: "Poetic influence, as I conceive it, is a variety of melancholy or the anxiety-principle." New poets become inspired to write because they have read and admired previous poets, but this admiration turns into resentment when the new poets discover that the poets they idolized have already said everything they wish to say. The poets become disappointed because they "cannot be Adam early in the morning. There have been too many Adams, and they have named everything."[citation needed][30]

In order to evade this psychological obstacle, according to Bloom, poets must be convinced that earlier poets have gone wrong somewhere and failed in their vision, thus leaving open the possibility that they have something to add to the tradition. Poets' love for their heroes turns into antagonism toward them: "Initial love for the precursor's poetry is transformed rapidly enough into revisionary strife, without which individuation is not possible."[31] The book that followed Yeats, The Anxiety of Influence, which Bloom started writing in 1967, drew upon the example of Walter Jackson Bate's The Burden of the Past and The English Poet and recast in systematic psychoanalytic form Bate's historicized account of the despair 17th- and 18th-century poets felt about their inability to equal their predecessors. Bloom attempted to trace the psychological process by which poets broke free from their precursors to achieve their own poetic visions. He drew a sharp distinction between "strong poets", who perform "strong misreadings" of their precursors, and "weak poets", who merely repeat their precursors' ideas as though following a kind of doctrine. He described this process in terms of a sequence of "revisionary ratios", through which strong poets pass in the course of their careers.

Addenda and developments of his theory edit

 
Photo portrait from the dust jacket of Agon: Towards a Theory of Revisionism (1982)

A Map of Misreading picks up where The Anxiety of Influence left off, making several adjustments to Bloom's system of revisionary ratios. Kabbalah and Criticism attempts to invoke the esoteric interpretive system of the Lurianic Kabbalah, as explicated by scholar Gershom Scholem, as an alternate system of mapping the path of poetic influence. Figures of Capable Imagination collected odd pieces Bloom had written in the process of composing his "influence" books.

Bloom continued to write about influence theory throughout the 1970s and '80s, and penned little thereafter that did not invoke his ideas about influence.

Novel experiment edit

Bloom's fascination with David Lindsay's fantasy novel A Voyage to Arcturus led him to take a brief break from criticism to compose a sequel to it. This novel, The Flight to Lucifer, was Bloom's only work of fiction.[32]

Religious criticism edit

Bloom then entered a phase of what he called "religious criticism", beginning with Ruin the Sacred Truths: Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present (1989). In The Book of J (1990), he and David Rosenberg (who translated the Biblical texts) portrayed one of the posited ancient documents that formed the basis of the first five books of the Bible (see documentary hypothesis) as the work of a great literary artist who had no intention of composing a dogmatically religious work (see Jahwist). They envisaged this anonymous writer as a woman attached to the court of the successors of the Israelite kings David and Solomon—a piece of speculation that drew much attention. Later, Bloom said that the speculations did not go far enough, and perhaps he should have identified J with the Biblical Bathsheba.[33] In Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine (2004), he revisits some of the territory covered in The Book of J in discussing the significance of Yahweh and Jesus of Nazareth as literary characters, while casting a critical eye on historical approaches and asserting the fundamental incompatibility of Christianity and Judaism.

In The American Religion (1992), Bloom surveyed the major varieties of Protestant and post-Protestant religious faiths that originated in the United States and argued that, in terms of their psychological hold on their adherents, most had more in common with gnosticism than with historical Christianity. The exception was the Jehovah's Witnesses, whom Bloom regards as non-Gnostic. He elsewhere predicted that the Mormon and Pentecostal strains of American Christianity would overtake mainstream Protestant divisions in popularity in the next few decades.[34] In Omens of Millennium (1996), Bloom identifies these American religious elements as on the periphery of an old – and not inherently Christian – gnostic, religious tradition that invokes a complex of ideas and experiences concerning angelology, interpretation of dreams as prophecy, near-death experiences, and millennialism.[35]

In his essay in The Gospel of Thomas, Bloom writes that none of Thomas's Aramaic sayings have survived in the original language.[36] Marvin Meyer generally agreed and further confirmed that the earlier versions of that text were likely written in either Aramaic or Greek.[37] Meyer ends his introduction with an endorsement of much of Bloom's essay.[38] Bloom notes the otherworldliness of the Jesus in Thomas's sayings by making reference to "the paradox also of the American Jesus."[39]

The Western Canon edit

The Western Canon (1994), a survey of the major literary works of Europe and the Americas since the 14th century, focuses on 26 works Bloom considers sublime and representative of their nations[40] and of the Western canon.[41] Besides analyses of the canon's various representative works, Bloom's major concern in the volume was to reclaim literature from what he called the "School of Resentment", the mostly academic critics who espoused a social purpose in their work. Bloom asserted that the goals of reading must be solitary aesthetic pleasure and self-insight rather than the goal of improving one's society held by "forces of resentment". He cast the latter as absurd, writing: "The idea that you benefit the insulted and injured by reading someone of their own origins rather than reading Shakespeare is one of the oddest illusions ever promoted by or in our schools." His position was that politics had no place in literary criticism: that a feminist or Marxist reading of Hamlet would tell us something about feminism and Marxism but probably nothing about Hamlet.

In addition to considering how much influence a writer had had on later writers, Bloom proposed the concept of "canonical strangeness" (cf. uncanny) as a benchmark of a literary work's merit. The Western Canon also included a list—noted by the general public with widespread interest—of the Western works from antiquity to the present that Bloom considered either permanent members of the canon of literary classics, or candidates for that status. Bloom said that he made the list off the top of his head at his editor's request, and that he did not stand by it.[42]

Work on Shakespeare edit

External videos
  Presentation by Bloom on Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, December 10, 1998, C-SPAN
 
William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

Bloom had a deep appreciation for William Shakespeare,[43] considering him the supreme center of the Western canon.[44] The first edition of The Anxiety of Influence almost completely avoided Shakespeare, whom Bloom then considered barely touched by the psychological drama of anxiety. The second edition, published in 1997, added a long preface that mostly expounded Shakespeare's debt to Ovid and Chaucer, and his agon with Christopher Marlowe, who set the stage for him by breaking free of ecclesiastical and moralizing overtones.

In his later survey, Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human (1998), Bloom provided an analysis of each of Shakespeare's 38 plays, "twenty-four of which are masterpieces."[45] Written as a companion to the general reader and theater-goer, Bloom declared that bardolatry "ought to be even more a secular religion than it already is."[46] He also contended in the work that Shakespeare "invented" humanity, in that he prescribed the now-common practice of "overhearing" ourselves, which drives our changes. The two paragons of his theory were Sir John Falstaff of Henry IV and Hamlet, whom Bloom saw as representing self-satisfaction and self-loathing, respectively. These two characters, Iago, and Cleopatra Bloom believed (citing A. C. Bradley) are "the four Shakespearean characters most inexhaustible to meditation."[45]

Throughout Shakespeare, characters from disparate plays are imagined alongside and interacting with each other. Contemporary academics and critics decried this as harking back to the out-of-fashion character criticism of Bradley (and others), who are explicitly praised in the book. As in The Western Canon, Bloom criticizes what he calls the "School of Resentment" for its failure to live up to the challenge of Shakespeare's universality and for balkanizing the study of literature through multicultural and historicist departments. Asserting Shakespeare's singular popularity throughout the world, Bloom proclaims him the only truly multicultural author. Repudiating the "social energies" to which historicists ascribed Shakespeare's authorship, Bloom pronounced his modern academic foes – and all of society – to be but "a parody of Shakespearean energies".

2000s and 2010s edit

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Bloom on How to Read and Why, September 3, 2000, C-SPAN

Bloom consolidated his work on the Western canon with the publication of How to Read and Why (2000) and Genius: A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds (2003). Hamlet: Poem Unlimited (also 2003) is an amendment to Shakespeare: Invention of the Human written after Bloom decided the chapter on Hamlet in the earlier book had been too focused on the textual question of the Ur-Hamlet to cover his most central thoughts on the play itself. Some elements of religious criticism were combined with his secular criticism in Where Shall Wisdom Be Found (2004), and a more complete return to religious criticism was marked by the publication of Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine (2005). Throughout the decade he also compiled, edited and introduced several major anthologies of poetry.

Bloom took part in Paul Festa's 2006 documentary Apparition of the Eternal Church. It centers on people's reactions to hearing for the first time Olivier Messiaen's organ piece Apparition de l'église éternelle.

Bloom began a book under the working title Living Labyrinth, centering on Shakespeare and Walt Whitman, which was published as The Anatomy of Influence: Literature as a Way of Life (2011).

In July 2011, after the publication of The Anatomy of Influence and after finishing work on The Shadow of a Great Rock, Bloom was working on three further projects:

  • Achievement in the Evening Land from Emerson to Faulkner, a history of American literature following the canonical model, which ultimately developed into his book The Daemon Knows: Literary Greatness and the American Sublime (2015).
  • The Hum of Thoughts Evaded in the Mind: A Literary Memoir, which ultimately developed into his book Possessed by Memory: The Inward Light of Criticism (2019), the last book Bloom published during his lifetime.
  • a play with the working title Walt Whitman: A Musical Pageant.[47] By November 2011, Bloom had changed the title to To You Whoever You Are: A Pageant Celebrating Walt Whitman.[48] This work is unpublished and it is unknown how much of it was finished.

Influence edit

 
In The Western Canon, Bloom claimed that Samuel Johnson was "unmatched by any critic in any nation before or after him."

In 1986, Bloom credited Northrop Frye as his nearest precursor. He told Imre Salusinszky in 1986: "In terms of my own theorizations ... the precursor proper has to be Northrop Frye. I purchased and read Fearful Symmetry a week or two after it had come out and reached the bookstore in Ithaca, New York. It ravished my heart away. I have tried to find an alternative father in Mr. Kenneth Burke, who is a charming fellow and a very powerful critic, but I don't come from Burke, I come out of Frye."[49]

But in Anatomy of Influence (2011), Bloom wrote, "I no longer have the patience to read anything by Frye" and nominated Angus Fletcher among his living contemporaries as his "critical guide and conscience". Elsewhere that year, he recommended Fletcher's Colors of the Mind and M. H. Abrams's The Mirror and the Lamp. In this late phase, Bloom also emphasized the tradition of earlier critics such as William Hazlitt, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walter Pater, A. C. Bradley, and Samuel Johnson, describing Johnson in The Western Canon as "unmatched by any critic in any nation before or after him". In his 2012 foreword to The Fourth Dimension of a Poem (WW Norton, 2012), Bloom indicated the influence Abrams had upon him in his years at Cornell.[50]

Bloom's theory of poetic influence regards the development of Western literature as a process of borrowing and misreading. Writers find their creative inspiration in previous writers and begin by imitating them, but must make their own work different from their precursors'. As a result, Bloom argues, authors of real power must inevitably "misread" their precursors to make room for fresh imaginings.[51][52]

Observers often identified Bloom with deconstruction, but he never admitted to sharing more than a few ideas with deconstructionists. He told Robert Moynihan in 1983, "What I think I have in common with the school of deconstruction is the mode of negative thinking or negative awareness, in the technical, philosophical sense of the negative, but which comes to me through negative theology ... There is no escape, there is simply the given, and there is nothing that we can do."[53]

Bloom's association with the Western canon provoked a substantial interest in his opinion of the relative importance of contemporary writers. In the late 1980s, Bloom told an interviewer: "Probably the most powerful living Western writer is Samuel Beckett. He's certainly the most authentic."[54]

Of British writers, Bloom said: "Geoffrey Hill is the strongest British poet now active" and "no other contemporary British novelist seems to me to be of Iris Murdoch's eminence". After Murdoch died, Bloom expressed admiration for the novelists Peter Ackroyd, Will Self, John Banville, and A. S. Byatt.[55]

In Genius: A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds (2003), he called the Portuguese writer José Saramago "the most gifted novelist alive in the world today" and "one of the last titans of an expiring literary genre".

Of American novelists, Bloom said in 2003, "there are four living American novelists I know of who are still at work and who deserve our praise".[56] Saying that "they write the Style of our Age" and that "each has composed canonical works", he identified them as Thomas Pynchon, Philip Roth, Cormac McCarthy, and Don DeLillo. He named their respective masterpieces as The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow and Mason & Dixon; Sabbath's Theater and American Pastoral; Blood Meridian; and Underworld. He added to this estimate the work of John Crowley, with special interest in his Aegypt Sequence and novel Little, Big, saying, "only a handful of living writers in English can equal him as a stylist, and most of them are poets ... only Philip Roth consistently writes on Crowley's level".[57] Bloom called Crowley's Little, Big "a neglected masterpiece" and "the most enchanting twentieth-century book I know". He wrote the afterword to a 40th-anniversary edition of the novel.[58] Shortly before his death, Bloom expressed admiration for the works of Joshua Cohen, William Giraldi, and Nell Freudenberger.[59]

In Kabbalah and Criticism (1975), Bloom identified Robert Penn Warren, James Merrill, John Ashbery, and Elizabeth Bishop as the most important living American poets. By the 1990s, he regularly named A. R. Ammons along with Ashbery and Merrill, and he later identified Henri Cole as the crucial American poet of the generation following those three. He expressed great admiration for the Canadian poets Anne Carson, particularly her verse novel Autobiography of Red, and A. F. Moritz, whom Bloom called "a true poet".[60] Bloom also listed Jay Wright as one of only a handful of major living poets and the best living American poet after Ashbery's death.[61][62]

Bloom's introduction to Modern Critical Interpretations: Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow (1986) features his canon of the "twentieth-century American Sublime", the greatest works of American art produced in the 20th century. Playwright Tony Kushner sees Bloom as an important influence on his work.[63]

Reception edit

Bloom's work has drawn polarized responses, even among established literary scholars. Bloom was called "probably the most celebrated literary critic in the United States"[64] and "America's best-known man of letters".[65] A 1994 New York Times article said that many younger critics see Bloom as an "outdated oddity",[5] whereas a 1998 New York Times article called him "one of the most gifted of contemporary critics".[66]

James Wood wrote: "Vatic, repetitious, imprecisely reverential, though never without a peculiar charm of his own—a kind of campiness, in fact—Bloom as a literary critic in the last few years has been largely unimportant."[65] Bloom responded to questions about Wood in an interview by saying: "There are period pieces in criticism as there are period pieces in the novel and in poetry. The wind blows and they will go away ... There's nothing to the man ... I don't want to talk about him".[42]

In the early 21st century, Bloom often found himself at the center of literary controversy after criticizing popular writers such as Adrienne Rich,[67] Maya Angelou,[68] and David Foster Wallace.[69] In the pages of The Paris Review, he criticized the populist-leaning poetry slam, saying: "It is the death of art."[70] When Doris Lessing received the Nobel Prize in Literature, he bemoaned the "pure political correctness" of the award to an author of "fourth-rate science fiction", while conceding his appreciation of Lessing's earlier work.[71]

MormonVoices, a group associated with Foundation for Apologetic Information & Research, included Bloom on its Top Ten Anti-Mormon Statements of 2011 list for saying, "The current head of the Mormon Church, Thomas S. Monson, known to his followers as 'prophet, seer and revelator,' is indistinguishable from the secular plutocratic oligarchs who exercise power in our supposed democracy."[72] This was despite Bloom's sympathy for Joseph Smith, the founding prophet of Mormonism, whom he called a "religious genius".[73]

Written works edit

Books edit

  • Shelley's Mythmaking. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959.
  • The Visionary Company: A Reading of English Romantic Poetry. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961. Revised and enlarged edn. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1971.
  • Blake's Apocalypse: A Study in Poetic Argument. Anchor Books: New York: Doubleday and Co., 1963.
  • The Literary Criticism of John Ruskin.; edited with introduction. New York: DoubleDay, 1965.
  • Walter Pater: Marius the Epicurean; edition with introduction. New York: New American Library, 1970.
  • Romanticism and Consciousness: Essays in Criticism.; edited with introduction. New York: Norton, 1970.
  • Yeats. New York: Oxford University Press, 1970. ISBN 0-19-501603-3
  • The Ringers in the Tower: Studies in Romantic Tradition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1971.
  • The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry. New York: Oxford University Press, 1973; 2nd edn, 1997. ISBN 0-19-511221-0
  • The Selected Writings of Walter Pater; edition with introduction and notes. New York: New American Library, 1974.
  • A Map of Misreading. New York: Oxford University Press, 1975.
  • Kabbalah and Criticism. New York : Seabury Press, 1975. ISBN 0-8264-0242-9
  • Poetry and Repression: Revisionism from Blake to Stevens. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1976.
  • Figures of Capable Imagination. New York: Seabury Press, 1976.
  • Wallace Stevens: The Poems of our Climate. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1977.
  • Deconstruction and Criticism. New York: Seabury Press, 1980.
  • The Flight to Lucifer: A Gnostic Fantasy. New York: Vintage Books, 1980. ISBN 0-394-74323-7
  • Agon: Towards a Theory of Revisionism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982.
  • The Breaking of the Vessels. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982.
  • The strong light of the canonical: Kafka, Freud and Scholem as revisionists of Jewish culture and thought. Published by New York: The City College, 1987.
  • The Poetics of Influence: New and Selected Criticism. New Haven: Henry R. Schwab, 1988.
  • Ruin the Sacred Truths: Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1989.
  • The Book of J: Translated from the Hebrew by David Rosenberg; Interpreted by Harold Bloom. New York: Grove Press, 1990 ISBN 0-8021-4191-9
  • The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus; translation with introduction, critical edition of the Coptic text and notes by Marvin Meyer, with an interpretation by Harold Bloom. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992.
  • The American Religion: The Emergence of the Post-Christian Nation; Touchstone Books; ISBN 0-671-86737-7 (1992; August 1993)
  • The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1994.
  • Omens of Millennium: The Gnosis of Angels, Dreams, and Resurrection. New York: Riverhead Books, 1996.
  • Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human. New York: 1998. ISBN 1-57322-751-X
  • How to Read and Why. New York: 2000. ISBN 0-684-85906-8
  • Stories and Poems for Extremely Intelligent Children of All Ages. New York: 2001.
  • El futur de la imaginació (The Future of the Imagination). Barcelona: Anagrama / Empúries, 2002. ISBN 84-7596-927-5
  • Genius: A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds. New York: 2003. ISBN 0-446-52717-3
  • Hamlet: Poem Unlimited. New York: 2003.
  • The Best Poems of the English Language: From Chaucer Through Frost. New York: 2004. ISBN 0-06-054041-9
  • Where Shall Wisdom Be Found? New York: 2004. ISBN 1-57322-284-4
  • Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine. 2005. ISBN 1-57322-322-0
  • American Religious Poems: An Anthology By Harold Bloom. 2006. ISBN 1-931082-74-X
  • Fallen Angels, illustrated by Mark Podwal. Yale University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-300-12348-5
  • Till I End My Song: A Gathering of Last Poems Harper, 2010. ISBN 0-06-192305-2
  • The Anatomy of Influence: Literature as a Way of Life. Yale University Press, 2011. ISBN 0-300-16760-1
  • The Shadow of a Great Rock: A Literary Appreciation of The King James Bible. Yale University Press, 2011. ISBN 0-300-16683-4
  • The Daemon Knows: Literary Greatness and the American Sublime. Spiegel & Grau, 2015. ISBN 0-812-99782-4
  • Falstaff: Give Me Life. Scribner, 2017. ISBN 978-1-5011-6413-2
  • Cleopatra: I Am Fire and Air. Scribner, 2017. ISBN 978-1-5011-6416-3
  • Lear: The Great Image of Authority. Scribner, 2018. ISBN 978-1-5011-6419-4
  • Iago: The Strategies of Evil. Scribner, 2018. ISBN 978-1-5011-6422-4
  • Macbeth: A Dagger of the Mind. Scribner, 2019. ISBN 978-1-5011-6425-5
  • Possessed by Memory: The Inward Light of Criticism. Knopf, 2019. ISBN 978-0-5255-2088-7
  • Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles: The Power of the Reader’s Mind Over a Universe of Death. Yale, 2020. ISBN 978-0300247282
  • The Bright Book of Life: Novels to Read and Re-read. Knopf, 2020. ISBN 978-0525657262

Articles edit

  • "On Extended Wings" August 15, 2017, at the Wayback Machine; Wallace Stevens' Longer Poems. By Helen Hennessy Vendler, (Review), The New York Times, October 5, 1969.
  • "Poets' meeting in the heyday of their youth; A Single Summer With Lord Byron", The New York Times, February 15, 1970.
  • "An angel's spirit in a decaying (and active) body" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, November 22, 1970.
  • "The Use of Poetry" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, November 12, 1975.
  • "Northrop Frye exalting the designs of romance; The Secular Scripture" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, April 18, 1976.
  • "On Solitude in America" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, August 4, 1977.
  • "The Critic/Poet" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, February 5, 1978.
  • "A Fusion of Traditions: The Collected Works of Isaac Rosenberg" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, July 22, 1979.
  • "Straight Forth Out of Self", The New York Times, June 22, 1980.
  • "The Heavy Burden of the Past; Poets", The New York Times, January 4, 1981.
  • "The Pictures of the Poet; The Painting and Drawings of William Blake, by Martin Butlin. Vol. I, Text. Vol. II, Plates" (review), The New York Times, January 3, 1982.
  • "A Novelist's Bible; The Story of the Stories, The Chosen People and Its God. By Dan Jacobson" (review), The New York Times, October 17, 1982.
  • "Isaac Bashevis Singer's Jeremiad; The Penitent, By Isaac Bashevis Singer" (review), The New York Times, September 25, 1983.
  • "Domestic Derangements; A Late Divorce, By A. B. Yehoshua Translated by Hillel Halkin" (review), The New York Times, February 19, 1984.
  • "War Within the Walls; In the Freud Archives, By Janet Malcolm" (review), The New York Times, May 27, 1984.
  • "His Long Ordeal by Laughter; Zuckerman Bound, A Trilogy and Epilogue. By Philip Roth" (review), The New York Times, May 19, 1985.
  • "A Comedy of Worldly Salvation; The Good Apprentice, By Iris Murdoch" (review), The New York Times, January 12, 1986.
  • "Freud, the Greatest Modern Writer" (review), The New York Times, March 23, 1986.
  • "Passionate Beholder of America in Trouble; Look Homeward, A Life of Thomas Wolfe. By David Herbert Donald" (review), The New York Times, February 8, 1987.
  • "The Book of the Father; The Messiah of Stockholm, By Cynthia Ozick" (review), The New York Times, March 22, 1987.
  • "Still Haunted by Covenant" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine (review), The New York Times, January 31, 1988.
  • "New Heyday of Gnostic Heresies" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, April 26, 1992.
  • "A Jew Among the Cossacks; The first English translation of Isaac Babel's journal about his service with the Russian cavalry. 1920 Diary, By Isaac Babel" (review), The New York Times, June 4, 1995.
  • "Kaddish; By Leon Wieseltier" (review), The New York Times, October 4, 1998.
  • "View; On First Looking into Gates's Crichton", The New York Times, June 4, 2000.
  • "What Ho, Malvolio! July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine'; The election, as Shakespeare might have seen it", The New York Times, December 6, 2000.
  • "Macbush" (play), Vanity Fair, April 2004.
  • "The Lost Jewish Culture" January 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Review of Books 54/11 (June 28, 2007) : 44–47 [reviews The Dreams of the Poem: Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain, 950–1492, translated, edited, and with an introduction by Peter Cole
  • "The Glories of Yiddish" January 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 55/17 (November 6, 2008) [reviews History of the Yiddish Language, by Max Weinreich, edited by Paul Glasser, translated from the Yiddish by Shlomo Noble with the assistance of Joshua A. Fishman]
  • "Yahweh Meets R. Crumb October 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine", The New York Review of Books, 56/19 (December 3, 2009) [reviews The Book of Genesis, illustrated by R. Crumb]
  • "Will This Election Be the Mormon Breakthrough?" June 6, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, November 12, 2011.
  • "Richard III: Victim or Monster? Asks Harold Bloom" July 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, Newsweek, February 11, 2013.
  • Introduction to The Invention of Influence by Peter Cole December 3, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, The Tablet, January 21, 2014.

Reference Series edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Faculty – English". Yale University. from the original on March 22, 2019. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  2. ^ "Harold Bloom". Oxford Bibliographies. from the original on October 19, 2022. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  3. ^ Miller, Mary Alice. "How Harold Bloom Selected His Top 12 American Authors". Vanity Fair. from the original on July 12, 2017. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  4. ^ Romano, Carlin (April 24, 2011). "Harold Bloom by the Numbers – The Chronicle Review". The Chronicle of Higher Education. from the original on April 9, 2019. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  5. ^ a b Begley, Adam (September 24, 1994). "Review: Colossus Among Critics: Harold Bloom". The New York Times. New York. from the original on August 23, 2017. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  6. ^ "APS Member History". American Philosophical Society. from the original on December 20, 2021. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Dinitia (October 14, 2019). "Harold Bloom, Critic Who Championed Western Canon, Dies at 89". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on October 14, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  8. ^ Redfield, Marc (2003). "Literature, Incorporated". In Herman, Peter C. (ed.). Historicizing Theory. New York City: SUNY Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-7914-5962-1.
  9. ^ Collins, Glenn (January 16, 2006). "New Bronx Library Meets Old Need". The New York Times. from the original on April 17, 2009. Retrieved February 23, 2010.
  10. ^ "Harold Bloom Biography – eNotes.com". eNotes. from the original on November 23, 2019. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  11. ^ a b c "Harold Bloom: The Shadow of a Great Rock". Bookworm. KCRW. from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
  12. ^ Collins, Glenn (January 16, 2006). "New Bronx Library Meets Old Need". The New York Times. from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  13. ^ Bloom, Harold (2004). The Best Poems of the English Language: From Chaucer Through Robert Frost. HarperCollins. p. 1942.
  14. ^ "Harold Bloom facts, information, pictures – Encyclopedia.com articles about Harold Bloom". www.encyclopedia.com. from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  15. ^ International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004 (19th ed.). London: Europa Publications. 2003. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-85743-179-7.
  16. ^ Harold Bloom, "Introduction" in Harold Bloom (ed.), C.S. Lewis (New York: Chelsea House, 2006), p. 1.
  17. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (May 20, 2011). "Harold Bloom: An Uncommon Reader". The New York Times. from the original on October 4, 2015. Retrieved February 16, 2016.
  18. ^ "Collegium Ralstonianum apud Savannenses – Home". Ralston.ac. from the original on April 16, 2019. Retrieved January 21, 2014.
  19. ^ Fish, Stanley (November 8, 2010). "The Woe-Is-Us Books". The New York Times. from the original on January 16, 2011. Retrieved January 10, 2011.
  20. ^ Bloom, Harold (February 23, 2012). "The Grand Comedian Visits the Bible by Harold Bloom". The New York Review of Books. Nybooks.com. from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  21. ^ a b Woo, Elaine (October 14, 2019). "Harold Bloom, author of 'Anxiety of Influence' who fought modern trends, dies at 89". Los Angeles Times. from the original on October 15, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  22. ^ Laura, Quinney (November 27, 2005). "An Interview with Harold Bloom". Romantic Circles. University of Colorado Boulder. from the original on March 28, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  23. ^ Begley, Adam (September 25, 1994). "Colossus Among Critics: Harold Bloom". The New York Times. from the original on September 23, 2020. Retrieved October 15, 2019.
  24. ^ Wolf, Naomi (February 20, 2004). "The Silent Treatment". New York. from the original on February 17, 2007. Retrieved January 20, 2007.
  25. ^ D'addario, Daniel (May 11, 2015). "10 Questions with Harold Bloom". Time Magazine.
  26. ^ Hartman, Geoffrey H. (2007). Criticism in the Wilderness: The Study of Literature Today. Yale University Press. p. 102. ISBN 9780300123982.
  27. ^ "YEATS by Harold Bloom". www.kirkusreviews.com. July 21, 2019. from the original on October 16, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  28. ^ "Wallace Stevens: The Poems of Our Climate". Cornell University Press. from the original on October 16, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  29. ^ Pakenham, Michael (March 23, 2003). "In Full Bloom: Guerrilla In Our Midst". The Baltimore Sun. from the original on October 18, 2016. Retrieved September 15, 2016.
  30. ^ Bloom, Harold (1970). Yeats. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 4.
  31. ^ Map of Misreading, p. 10.
  32. ^ "The Flight to Lucifer review". from the original on July 20, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
  33. ^ Bloom, Harold, The Western Canon. The Books and Schools of the Ages, New York: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1994, p. 5.
  34. ^ Rust, Richard Dilworth (1993). "Book review". Journal of Mormon History. 19 (2): 144–147.
  35. ^ Bloom (1996), p. 5.
  36. ^ Bloom, Harold. "A Reading", in The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus. English translation and critical edition of the Coptic text by Marvin W. Meyer. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992, pp. 115 and 119.
  37. ^ Mayer, Marvin. "Introduction". The Gospel of Thomas. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992, p. 9.
  38. ^ Meyer (1992), p. 19.
  39. ^ Meyer (1992), p. 119.
  40. ^ Bloom (1994), p. 2.
  41. ^ Bloom (1994), p. 11.
  42. ^ a b Pearson, Jesse (December 2, 2008). "Harold Bloom". VICE United States. from the original on October 14, 2013. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  43. ^ Bloom (1994), pp. 2–3.
  44. ^ Bloom (1994), pp. 24–5.
  45. ^ a b "Harold Bloom". December 2, 2008. from the original on August 29, 2022. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  46. ^ Bloom, Harold. Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human. New York: Riverhead, 1998, p. xix.
  47. ^ "Harold Bloom: On the Playing Field of Poetry - Open Source with Christopher Lydon". www.radioopensource.org. July 5, 2011. from the original on March 28, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  48. ^ "Will This Election Be the Mormon Breakthrough?" June 6, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, November 12, 2011.
  49. ^ "Presidential Lectures: Harold Bloom: Interviews". prelectur.stanford.edu. from the original on February 6, 2006. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  50. ^ M. H. Abrams. The Fourth Dimension of a Poem (WW Norton, 2012).
  51. ^ Antonio Weiss (Spring 1991). "Harold Bloom, The Art of Criticism No. 1". Paris Review. Spring 1991 (118). from the original on February 12, 2021. Retrieved October 27, 2010.
  52. ^ Paul Fry, "Engl 300: Introduction To Theory Of Literature" April 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Lecture 14 – Influence. Open Yale lectures on the influence of Bloom and Eliot.
  53. ^ "Interview with Harold Bloom". Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts. Stanford University. from the original on June 20, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2014. Excerpted from "Interview: Harold Bloom interviewed by Robert Moynihan" Diacritics : A Review of Contemporary Criticism vol. 13 , No. 3 (Fall, 1983), pp. 57–68.
  54. ^ "Candidates for Survival: A talk with Harold Bloom", Boston Review, February, 1989; March 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ Bloom, Harold (2002). Genius : a mosaic of one hundred exemplary creative minds. New York: Warner Books. p. 648. ISBN 0-446-69129-1. There are a few affinities, except perhaps with the admirable Antonia Byatt, in the generation after: novelists I also now admire, like Will Self, Peter Ackroyd, and John Banville.
  56. ^ "Dumbing Down American Readers", Boston Globe, September 24, 2003. June 17, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ Bloom, Harold (2003). "Preface". Snake's-hands : the fiction of John Crowley. [Canton, OH]: Cosmos Books. p. 10. ISBN 1-58715-509-5.
  58. ^ "Little, Big". Deep Vellum Publishing.
  59. ^ Bloom, Harold (2020). The Bright Book of Life: Novels to Read and Reread. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 504.
  60. ^ Hollander, John (2002), "Enriching Shadow: A.F. Moritz's Early Poems", in Moritz, A.F. (ed.), Early Poems, Toronto: Insomniac Press, p. 17, ISBN 9781897414774
  61. ^ Harold Bloom (ed.), Modern Critical Interpretations: Jay Wright, New York: Chelsea House, 2003.
  62. ^ Bloom, Harold (2020). Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles: The Power of the Reader's Mind Over a Universe of Death. Yale University Press. p. 31.
  63. ^ Harold Bloom (ed.), Modern Critical Interpretations: Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow, New York: Chelsea House, 1986.
  64. ^ Kermode, Frank (October 12, 2002). "Review: Genius by Harold Bloom". The Guardian. London. from the original on March 18, 2017. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
  65. ^ a b Books, Used, New, and Out of Print Books - We Buy and Sell - Powell's. "Powell's Books - The World's Largest Independent Bookstore". www.powells.com. from the original on March 28, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  66. ^ Shapiro, James (November 1, 1998). "Soul of the Age". The New York Times. New York. from the original on August 28, 2017. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  67. ^ . Boston Review. Archived from the original on September 25, 2015. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  68. ^ "Miss Maya Angelou cannot write her way out of a paper bag!" Kenton Robinson, "Foe To Those Who Would Shape Literature To Their Own End Dissent in Bloom" Hartford Courant October 4, 1994 E.1
  69. ^ Koski, Lorna (April 26, 2011). "The Full Harold Bloom". Women's Wear Daily. from the original on June 1, 2013. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
  70. ^ Bloom, Harold (2009) quoted in Somers-Willett, Susan B.A., The Cultural Politics of Slam Poetry. University of Michigan Press. p. 21.
  71. ^ . msn.com. Associated Press. October 11, 2007. Archived from the original on April 4, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  72. ^ Walker, Joseph (January 8, 2012). "Group lists Top Ten Anti-Mormon Statements of 2011". Deseret News. from the original on March 13, 2012. Retrieved January 10, 2012.
  73. ^ "Harold Bloom Obituary". The Guardian. October 15, 2019. from the original on November 18, 2021. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
  74. ^ a b c "Bloom's Literary Criticism". Infobase Publishing. from the original on July 9, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Allen, Graham (1994). Harold Bloom: Poetics of Conflict. New York, NY: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
  • Basbanes, Nicholas A. (2005). Every Book Its Reader: The Power of the Printed Word to Stir the World. New York: HarperCollins. pp. 224–238. ISBN 9780060593230.
  • Bielik-Robson, Agata (2011). The Saving Lie: Harold Bloom and Deconstruction. Northwestern. ISBN 978-0-8101-2728-9.[permanent dead link]
  • Bloom, Harold (May 24, 2003). "The sage of Concord". The Guardian. from the original on June 25, 2008. Retrieved November 9, 2005.
  • Bloom, Harold. "Article on Ralph Waldo Emerson". Guardian Unlimited.
  • Bloom, Harold. "Excerpts from various Bloom interviews". The Stanford Presidential Lecture Series. from the original on February 6, 2006. Retrieved April 13, 2004.
  • Bloom, Harold (September 24, 2003). "Dumbing down American readers". The Boston Globe. from the original on June 17, 2006. Retrieved April 13, 2004.
  • Bloom, Harold (July 11, 2000). "Can 35 Million Book Buyers Be Wrong? Yes". The Wall Street Journal. His famous criticism of the Harry Potter series.
  • Bloom, Harold (October 12, 2008). "Out of Panic, Self-Reliance". The New York Times. from the original on May 31, 2023. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  • Bloom, Harold. "List of Bloom's contributions to The New York Review of Books". The New York Times. from the original on July 14, 2009. Retrieved December 30, 2008.
  • "Harold Bloom 1930–". Contemporary Literary Criticism. Contemporary Literary Criticism Series. Vol. 24. Detroit: Gale. 1983. pp. 70–83. ISBN 9780810301115.
  • Burrow, Colin, "The Magic Bloomschtick" (review of Harold Bloom, The American Canon: Literary Genius from Emerson to Pynchon, edited by David Mikics, Library of America, October 2019, 426 pp., ISBN 978 1 59853 640 9), London Review of Books, vol. 41, no. 22 (21 November 2019), pp. 21–25. "Harold Bloom will be remembered as a great provoker – of thought, of laughter, and of resistance. He didn't permanently reconfigure the literary landscape, but the idiosyncratic path he tracked across it is one few could follow." (Final two sentences of Burrow's review, p. 25.)
  • De Bolla, Peter (1988). Harold Bloom: Toward Historical Rhetorics. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • "Modern American Critics since 1955". Dictionary of Literary Biography. Gale. 67. 1988.
  • Fite, David (1985). Harold Bloom: The Rhetoric of Romantic Vision. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9780870234842.
  • Moynihan, Robert (1986). A Recent Imagining: Interviews with Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman, J. Hillis Miller, Paul De Man. Archon.
  • Saurberg, Lars Ole (1997). Versions of the Past—Visions of the Future: The Canonical in the Criticism of T.S. Eliot, F.R. Leavis, Northrop Frye, and Harold Bloom. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press.
  • Scherr, Barry J. (1995). D. H. Lawrence's Response to Plato: A Bloomian Interpretation. New York, NY: P. Lang.
  • Sellars, Roy; Allen, Graham, eds. (2007). The Salt Companion to Harold Bloom. Salt Publishing. ISBN 9781876857202.
  • "Interview with Bloom on NPR, regarding his book Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine". All Things Considered. NPR. from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  • . The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. 2000. Archived from the original on November 13, 2012. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  • . Claremont Review. April 2014. Archived from the original on October 8, 2006.
  • Lesinska, Ieva (October 26, 2004). . Eurozine. Archived from the original on November 1, 2005. Retrieved October 29, 2005.
  • Lydon, Christopher (September 3, 2003). "Radio interview". Harvard Law Weblogs. from the original on October 6, 2008. Retrieved March 21, 2004.
  • Rothenberg, Jennie (July 16, 2003). "Interview with Jennie Rothenberg". The Atlantic. from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  • Wood, James (May 1, 2006). "The Misreader". The New Republic. from the original on July 9, 2023. Retrieved October 8, 2017.

External links edit

  • Official website at Yale University
  • Harold Bloom on Charlie Rose
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
    • In Depth interview with Bloom, May 4, 2003, C-SPAN
  • Harold Bloom collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • Harold Bloom at Stanford Presidential Lectures
  • Oventile, Robert Savino (August 8, 2015). "Anarchic Transports: A Review of Harold Bloom's The Daemon Knows: Literary Greatness and the American Sublime". Review. Sobriquet Magazine.
  • Oventile, Robert Savino (January 16, 2024). "Daemonic Muses: A Review of Harold Bloom's and Cormac McCarthy's Final Works". Review. Ballast Journal.

harold, bloom, screenwriter, harold, jack, bloom, july, 1930, october, 2019, american, literary, critic, sterling, professor, humanities, yale, university, 2017, bloom, called, probably, most, famous, literary, critic, english, speaking, world, after, publishi. For the screenwriter see Harold Jack Bloom Harold Bloom July 11 1930 October 14 2019 was an American literary critic and the Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University 1 In 2017 Bloom was called probably the most famous literary critic in the English speaking world 2 After publishing his first book in 1959 Bloom wrote more than 50 books 3 including over 40 books of literary criticism several books discussing religion and one novel He edited hundreds of anthologies concerning numerous literary and philosophical figures for the Chelsea House publishing firm 4 5 Bloom s books have been translated into more than 40 languages He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1995 6 Harold BloomBloom in 1986Born 1930 07 11 July 11 1930New York City U S DiedOctober 14 2019 2019 10 14 aged 89 New Haven Connecticut U S OccupationLiterary criticwriterprofessorEducationCornell University BA Pembroke College Cambridge Yale University MA PhD Literary movementAestheticism RomanticismYears active1955 2019SpouseJeanne Gould m 1958 wbr Children2Bloom was a defender of the traditional Western canon at a time when literature departments were focusing on what he derided as the school of resentment multiculturalists feminists Marxists and others 7 8 He was educated at Yale University the University of Cambridge and Cornell University Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Teaching career 3 Personal life and death 4 Writing career 4 1 Defense of Romanticism 4 2 Influence theory 4 3 Addenda and developments of his theory 4 4 Novel experiment 4 5 Religious criticism 4 6 The Western Canon 4 7 Work on Shakespeare 4 8 2000s and 2010s 5 Influence 6 Reception 7 Written works 7 1 Books 7 2 Articles 8 Reference Series 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and education editBloom was born in New York City on July 11 1930 7 to Paula nee Lev and William Bloom He lived in the Bronx at 1410 Grand Concourse 9 10 He was raised as an Orthodox Jew in a Yiddish speaking household where he learned literary Hebrew 11 he learned English at the age of six 12 Bloom s father a garment worker was born in Odesa and his Lithuanian Jewish mother a homemaker near Brest Litovsk in what is today Belarus 11 Harold had three older sisters and an older brother He was the last living sibling 11 As a boy Bloom read Hart Crane s Collected Poems a collection that inspired his lifelong fascination with poetry 13 Bloom went to the Bronx High School of Science where his grades were poor but his standardized test scores were high 14 In 1951 he received a B A degree in classics from Cornell where he was a student of English literary critic M H Abrams and in 1955 a PhD from Yale 15 In 1954 55 Bloom was a Fulbright Scholar at Pembroke College Cambridge 16 Bloom was a standout student at Yale where he clashed with the faculty of New Critics including William K Wimsatt Several years later Bloom dedicated his book The Anxiety of Influence to Wimsatt 17 Teaching career editBloom was a member of the Yale English Department from 1955 to 2019 teaching his final class four days before his death 7 He received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1985 From 1988 to 2004 Bloom was Berg Professor of English at New York University while maintaining his position at Yale In 2010 he became a founding patron of Ralston College a new institution in Savannah Georgia that focuses on primary texts 18 19 Fond of endearments Bloom addressed both male and female students and friends as my dear 7 Personal life and death editBloom married Jeanne Gould in 1958 20 They had two children 21 In a 2005 interview Jeanne said that she and Harold were both atheists which he denied No no I m not an atheist It s no fun being an atheist 22 Bloom was the subject of a 1990 article in GQ titled Bloom in Love which accused him of having affairs with female graduate students He called the article a disgusting piece of character assassination Bloom s friend and colleague the biographer R W B Lewis said in 1994 that Bloom s wandering I gather is a thing of the past I hate to say it but he rather bragged about it so that wasn t very secret for a number of years 23 In a 2004 article for New York magazine Naomi Wolf wrote that while she was an undergraduate student at Yale University in 1983 Bloom attended a dinner with her saying he would discuss her writing Instead she claims that he came on to her placing his hand on her inner thigh 24 Bloom vigorously denied the allegation 7 25 Bloom never retired from teaching swearing that he would need to be removed from the classroom in a great big body bag He had open heart surgery in 2002 and broke his back after experiencing a fall in 2008 21 He died at a hospital in New Haven Connecticut on October 14 2019 He was 89 years old 7 Writing career editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Harold Bloom news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Defense of Romanticism edit Bloom began his career with a sequence of highly regarded monographs on Percy Bysshe Shelley Shelley s Myth making Yale University Press originally Bloom s doctoral dissertation 26 William Blake Blake s Apocalypse Doubleday W B Yeats Yeats Oxford University Press 27 and Wallace Stevens Wallace Stevens The Poems of Our Climate Cornell University Press 28 In these he defended the High Romantics against neo Christian critics influenced by such writers as T S Eliot who became a recurring intellectual foil Bloom had a contentious approach his first book Shelley s Myth making charged many contemporary critics with sheer carelessness in their reading of the poet citation needed Influence theory edit nbsp A lion faced deity associated with Gnosticism Bloom frequently referred to Gnosticism when speaking about general and personal religious matters After a personal crisis during the late 1960s Bloom became deeply interested in Ralph Waldo Emerson Sigmund Freud and the ancient mystic traditions of Gnosticism Kabbalah and Hermeticism In a 2003 interview with Bloom Michael Pakenham the book editor for The Baltimore Sun noted that Bloom had long called himself a Jewish Gnostic Bloom responded I am using Gnostic in a very broad way I am nothing if not Jewish I really am a product of Yiddish culture But I can t understand a Yahweh or a God who could be all powerful and all knowing and would allow the Nazi death camps and schizophrenia 29 Influenced by his reading he began a series of books that focused on the way in which poets struggle to create their individual poetic visions without being overcome by the influence of the poets who inspired them to write The first of these books Yeats challenged the conventional critical view of William Butler Yeats s poetic career In the introduction to this volume Bloom set out the basic principles of his new approach to criticism Poetic influence as I conceive it is a variety of melancholy or the anxiety principle New poets become inspired to write because they have read and admired previous poets but this admiration turns into resentment when the new poets discover that the poets they idolized have already said everything they wish to say The poets become disappointed because they cannot be Adam early in the morning There have been too many Adams and they have named everything citation needed 30 In order to evade this psychological obstacle according to Bloom poets must be convinced that earlier poets have gone wrong somewhere and failed in their vision thus leaving open the possibility that they have something to add to the tradition Poets love for their heroes turns into antagonism toward them Initial love for the precursor s poetry is transformed rapidly enough into revisionary strife without which individuation is not possible 31 The book that followed Yeats The Anxiety of Influence which Bloom started writing in 1967 drew upon the example of Walter Jackson Bate s The Burden of the Past and The English Poet and recast in systematic psychoanalytic form Bate s historicized account of the despair 17th and 18th century poets felt about their inability to equal their predecessors Bloom attempted to trace the psychological process by which poets broke free from their precursors to achieve their own poetic visions He drew a sharp distinction between strong poets who perform strong misreadings of their precursors and weak poets who merely repeat their precursors ideas as though following a kind of doctrine He described this process in terms of a sequence of revisionary ratios through which strong poets pass in the course of their careers Addenda and developments of his theory edit nbsp Photo portrait from the dust jacket of Agon Towards a Theory of Revisionism 1982 A Map of Misreading picks up where The Anxiety of Influence left off making several adjustments to Bloom s system of revisionary ratios Kabbalah and Criticism attempts to invoke the esoteric interpretive system of the Lurianic Kabbalah as explicated by scholar Gershom Scholem as an alternate system of mapping the path of poetic influence Figures of Capable Imagination collected odd pieces Bloom had written in the process of composing his influence books Bloom continued to write about influence theory throughout the 1970s and 80s and penned little thereafter that did not invoke his ideas about influence Novel experiment edit Bloom s fascination with David Lindsay s fantasy novel A Voyage to Arcturus led him to take a brief break from criticism to compose a sequel to it This novel The Flight to Lucifer was Bloom s only work of fiction 32 Religious criticism edit Bloom then entered a phase of what he called religious criticism beginning with Ruin the Sacred Truths Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present 1989 In The Book of J 1990 he and David Rosenberg who translated the Biblical texts portrayed one of the posited ancient documents that formed the basis of the first five books of the Bible see documentary hypothesis as the work of a great literary artist who had no intention of composing a dogmatically religious work see Jahwist They envisaged this anonymous writer as a woman attached to the court of the successors of the Israelite kings David and Solomon a piece of speculation that drew much attention Later Bloom said that the speculations did not go far enough and perhaps he should have identified J with the Biblical Bathsheba 33 In Jesus and Yahweh The Names Divine 2004 he revisits some of the territory covered in The Book of J in discussing the significance of Yahweh and Jesus of Nazareth as literary characters while casting a critical eye on historical approaches and asserting the fundamental incompatibility of Christianity and Judaism In The American Religion 1992 Bloom surveyed the major varieties of Protestant and post Protestant religious faiths that originated in the United States and argued that in terms of their psychological hold on their adherents most had more in common with gnosticism than with historical Christianity The exception was the Jehovah s Witnesses whom Bloom regards as non Gnostic He elsewhere predicted that the Mormon and Pentecostal strains of American Christianity would overtake mainstream Protestant divisions in popularity in the next few decades 34 In Omens of Millennium 1996 Bloom identifies these American religious elements as on the periphery of an old and not inherently Christian gnostic religious tradition that invokes a complex of ideas and experiences concerning angelology interpretation of dreams as prophecy near death experiences and millennialism 35 In his essay in The Gospel of Thomas Bloom writes that none of Thomas s Aramaic sayings have survived in the original language 36 Marvin Meyer generally agreed and further confirmed that the earlier versions of that text were likely written in either Aramaic or Greek 37 Meyer ends his introduction with an endorsement of much of Bloom s essay 38 Bloom notes the otherworldliness of the Jesus in Thomas s sayings by making reference to the paradox also of the American Jesus 39 The Western Canon edit The Western Canon 1994 a survey of the major literary works of Europe and the Americas since the 14th century focuses on 26 works Bloom considers sublime and representative of their nations 40 and of the Western canon 41 Besides analyses of the canon s various representative works Bloom s major concern in the volume was to reclaim literature from what he called the School of Resentment the mostly academic critics who espoused a social purpose in their work Bloom asserted that the goals of reading must be solitary aesthetic pleasure and self insight rather than the goal of improving one s society held by forces of resentment He cast the latter as absurd writing The idea that you benefit the insulted and injured by reading someone of their own origins rather than reading Shakespeare is one of the oddest illusions ever promoted by or in our schools His position was that politics had no place in literary criticism that a feminist or Marxist reading of Hamlet would tell us something about feminism and Marxism but probably nothing about Hamlet In addition to considering how much influence a writer had had on later writers Bloom proposed the concept of canonical strangeness cf uncanny as a benchmark of a literary work s merit The Western Canon also included a list noted by the general public with widespread interest of the Western works from antiquity to the present that Bloom considered either permanent members of the canon of literary classics or candidates for that status Bloom said that he made the list off the top of his head at his editor s request and that he did not stand by it 42 Work on Shakespeare edit External videos nbsp Presentation by Bloom on Shakespeare The Invention of the Human December 10 1998 C SPAN nbsp William Shakespeare 1564 1616 Bloom had a deep appreciation for William Shakespeare 43 considering him the supreme center of the Western canon 44 The first edition of The Anxiety of Influence almost completely avoided Shakespeare whom Bloom then considered barely touched by the psychological drama of anxiety The second edition published in 1997 added a long preface that mostly expounded Shakespeare s debt to Ovid and Chaucer and his agon with Christopher Marlowe who set the stage for him by breaking free of ecclesiastical and moralizing overtones In his later survey Shakespeare The Invention of the Human 1998 Bloom provided an analysis of each of Shakespeare s 38 plays twenty four of which are masterpieces 45 Written as a companion to the general reader and theater goer Bloom declared that bardolatry ought to be even more a secular religion than it already is 46 He also contended in the work that Shakespeare invented humanity in that he prescribed the now common practice of overhearing ourselves which drives our changes The two paragons of his theory were Sir John Falstaff of Henry IV and Hamlet whom Bloom saw as representing self satisfaction and self loathing respectively These two characters Iago and Cleopatra Bloom believed citing A C Bradley are the four Shakespearean characters most inexhaustible to meditation 45 Throughout Shakespeare characters from disparate plays are imagined alongside and interacting with each other Contemporary academics and critics decried this as harking back to the out of fashion character criticism of Bradley and others who are explicitly praised in the book As in The Western Canon Bloom criticizes what he calls the School of Resentment for its failure to live up to the challenge of Shakespeare s universality and for balkanizing the study of literature through multicultural and historicist departments Asserting Shakespeare s singular popularity throughout the world Bloom proclaims him the only truly multicultural author Repudiating the social energies to which historicists ascribed Shakespeare s authorship Bloom pronounced his modern academic foes and all of society to be but a parody of Shakespearean energies 2000s and 2010s edit External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Bloom on How to Read and Why September 3 2000 C SPANBloom consolidated his work on the Western canon with the publication of How to Read and Why 2000 and Genius A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds 2003 Hamlet Poem Unlimited also 2003 is an amendment to Shakespeare Invention of the Human written after Bloom decided the chapter on Hamlet in the earlier book had been too focused on the textual question of the Ur Hamlet to cover his most central thoughts on the play itself Some elements of religious criticism were combined with his secular criticism in Where Shall Wisdom Be Found 2004 and a more complete return to religious criticism was marked by the publication of Jesus and Yahweh The Names Divine 2005 Throughout the decade he also compiled edited and introduced several major anthologies of poetry Bloom took part in Paul Festa s 2006 documentary Apparition of the Eternal Church It centers on people s reactions to hearing for the first time Olivier Messiaen s organ piece Apparition de l eglise eternelle Bloom began a book under the working title Living Labyrinth centering on Shakespeare and Walt Whitman which was published as The Anatomy of Influence Literature as a Way of Life 2011 In July 2011 after the publication of The Anatomy of Influence and after finishing work on The Shadow of a Great Rock Bloom was working on three further projects Achievement in the Evening Land from Emerson to Faulkner a history of American literature following the canonical model which ultimately developed into his book The Daemon Knows Literary Greatness and the American Sublime 2015 The Hum of Thoughts Evaded in the Mind A Literary Memoir which ultimately developed into his book Possessed by Memory The Inward Light of Criticism 2019 the last book Bloom published during his lifetime a play with the working title Walt Whitman A Musical Pageant 47 By November 2011 Bloom had changed the title to To You Whoever You Are A Pageant Celebrating Walt Whitman 48 This work is unpublished and it is unknown how much of it was finished Influence edit nbsp In The Western Canon Bloom claimed that Samuel Johnson was unmatched by any critic in any nation before or after him In 1986 Bloom credited Northrop Frye as his nearest precursor He told Imre Salusinszky in 1986 In terms of my own theorizations the precursor proper has to be Northrop Frye I purchased and read Fearful Symmetry a week or two after it had come out and reached the bookstore in Ithaca New York It ravished my heart away I have tried to find an alternative father in Mr Kenneth Burke who is a charming fellow and a very powerful critic but I don t come from Burke I come out of Frye 49 But in Anatomy of Influence 2011 Bloom wrote I no longer have the patience to read anything by Frye and nominated Angus Fletcher among his living contemporaries as his critical guide and conscience Elsewhere that year he recommended Fletcher s Colors of the Mind and M H Abrams s The Mirror and the Lamp In this late phase Bloom also emphasized the tradition of earlier critics such as William Hazlitt Ralph Waldo Emerson Walter Pater A C Bradley and Samuel Johnson describing Johnson in The Western Canon as unmatched by any critic in any nation before or after him In his 2012 foreword to The Fourth Dimension of a Poem WW Norton 2012 Bloom indicated the influence Abrams had upon him in his years at Cornell 50 Bloom s theory of poetic influence regards the development of Western literature as a process of borrowing and misreading Writers find their creative inspiration in previous writers and begin by imitating them but must make their own work different from their precursors As a result Bloom argues authors of real power must inevitably misread their precursors to make room for fresh imaginings 51 52 Observers often identified Bloom with deconstruction but he never admitted to sharing more than a few ideas with deconstructionists He told Robert Moynihan in 1983 What I think I have in common with the school of deconstruction is the mode of negative thinking or negative awareness in the technical philosophical sense of the negative but which comes to me through negative theology There is no escape there is simply the given and there is nothing that we can do 53 Bloom s association with the Western canon provoked a substantial interest in his opinion of the relative importance of contemporary writers In the late 1980s Bloom told an interviewer Probably the most powerful living Western writer is Samuel Beckett He s certainly the most authentic 54 Of British writers Bloom said Geoffrey Hill is the strongest British poet now active and no other contemporary British novelist seems to me to be of Iris Murdoch s eminence After Murdoch died Bloom expressed admiration for the novelists Peter Ackroyd Will Self John Banville and A S Byatt 55 In Genius A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds 2003 he called the Portuguese writer Jose Saramago the most gifted novelist alive in the world today and one of the last titans of an expiring literary genre Of American novelists Bloom said in 2003 there are four living American novelists I know of who are still at work and who deserve our praise 56 Saying that they write the Style of our Age and that each has composed canonical works he identified them as Thomas Pynchon Philip Roth Cormac McCarthy and Don DeLillo He named their respective masterpieces as The Crying of Lot 49 Gravity s Rainbow and Mason amp Dixon Sabbath s Theater and American Pastoral Blood Meridian and Underworld He added to this estimate the work of John Crowley with special interest in his Aegypt Sequence and novel Little Big saying only a handful of living writers in English can equal him as a stylist and most of them are poets only Philip Roth consistently writes on Crowley s level 57 Bloom called Crowley s Little Big a neglected masterpiece and the most enchanting twentieth century book I know He wrote the afterword to a 40th anniversary edition of the novel 58 Shortly before his death Bloom expressed admiration for the works of Joshua Cohen William Giraldi and Nell Freudenberger 59 In Kabbalah and Criticism 1975 Bloom identified Robert Penn Warren James Merrill John Ashbery and Elizabeth Bishop as the most important living American poets By the 1990s he regularly named A R Ammons along with Ashbery and Merrill and he later identified Henri Cole as the crucial American poet of the generation following those three He expressed great admiration for the Canadian poets Anne Carson particularly her verse novel Autobiography of Red and A F Moritz whom Bloom called a true poet 60 Bloom also listed Jay Wright as one of only a handful of major living poets and the best living American poet after Ashbery s death 61 62 Bloom s introduction to Modern Critical Interpretations Thomas Pynchon s Gravity s Rainbow 1986 features his canon of the twentieth century American Sublime the greatest works of American art produced in the 20th century Playwright Tony Kushner sees Bloom as an important influence on his work 63 Reception editBloom s work has drawn polarized responses even among established literary scholars Bloom was called probably the most celebrated literary critic in the United States 64 and America s best known man of letters 65 A 1994 New York Times article said that many younger critics see Bloom as an outdated oddity 5 whereas a 1998 New York Times article called him one of the most gifted of contemporary critics 66 James Wood wrote Vatic repetitious imprecisely reverential though never without a peculiar charm of his own a kind of campiness in fact Bloom as a literary critic in the last few years has been largely unimportant 65 Bloom responded to questions about Wood in an interview by saying There are period pieces in criticism as there are period pieces in the novel and in poetry The wind blows and they will go away There s nothing to the man I don t want to talk about him 42 In the early 21st century Bloom often found himself at the center of literary controversy after criticizing popular writers such as Adrienne Rich 67 Maya Angelou 68 and David Foster Wallace 69 In the pages of The Paris Review he criticized the populist leaning poetry slam saying It is the death of art 70 When Doris Lessing received the Nobel Prize in Literature he bemoaned the pure political correctness of the award to an author of fourth rate science fiction while conceding his appreciation of Lessing s earlier work 71 MormonVoices a group associated with Foundation for Apologetic Information amp Research included Bloom on its Top Ten Anti Mormon Statements of 2011 list for saying The current head of the Mormon Church Thomas S Monson known to his followers as prophet seer and revelator is indistinguishable from the secular plutocratic oligarchs who exercise power in our supposed democracy 72 This was despite Bloom s sympathy for Joseph Smith the founding prophet of Mormonism whom he called a religious genius 73 Written works editBooks edit Shelley s Mythmaking New Haven Yale University Press 1959 The Visionary Company A Reading of English Romantic Poetry Garden City N Y Doubleday 1961 Revised and enlarged edn Ithaca Cornell University Press 1971 Blake s Apocalypse A Study in Poetic Argument Anchor Books New York Doubleday and Co 1963 The Literary Criticism of John Ruskin edited with introduction New York DoubleDay 1965 Walter Pater Marius the Epicurean edition with introduction New York New American Library 1970 Romanticism and Consciousness Essays in Criticism edited with introduction New York Norton 1970 Yeats New York Oxford University Press 1970 ISBN 0 19 501603 3 The Ringers in the Tower Studies in Romantic Tradition Chicago University of Chicago Press 1971 The Anxiety of Influence A Theory of Poetry New York Oxford University Press 1973 2nd edn 1997 ISBN 0 19 511221 0 The Selected Writings of Walter Pater edition with introduction and notes New York New American Library 1974 A Map of Misreading New York Oxford University Press 1975 Kabbalah and Criticism New York Seabury Press 1975 ISBN 0 8264 0242 9 Poetry and Repression Revisionism from Blake to Stevens New Haven Yale University Press 1976 Figures of Capable Imagination New York Seabury Press 1976 Wallace Stevens The Poems of our Climate Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1977 Deconstruction and Criticism New York Seabury Press 1980 The Flight to Lucifer A Gnostic Fantasy New York Vintage Books 1980 ISBN 0 394 74323 7 Agon Towards a Theory of Revisionism New York Oxford University Press 1982 The Breaking of the Vessels Chicago University of Chicago Press 1982 The strong light of the canonical Kafka Freud and Scholem as revisionists of Jewish culture and thought Published by New York The City College 1987 The Poetics of Influence New and Selected Criticism New Haven Henry R Schwab 1988 Ruin the Sacred Truths Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1989 The Book of J Translated from the Hebrew by David Rosenberg Interpreted by Harold Bloom New York Grove Press 1990 ISBN 0 8021 4191 9 The Gospel of Thomas The Hidden Sayings of Jesus translation with introduction critical edition of the Coptic text and notes by Marvin Meyer with an interpretation by Harold Bloom San Francisco HarperSanFrancisco 1992 The American Religion The Emergence of the Post Christian Nation Touchstone Books ISBN 0 671 86737 7 1992 August 1993 The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages New York Harcourt Brace 1994 Omens of Millennium The Gnosis of Angels Dreams and Resurrection New York Riverhead Books 1996 Shakespeare The Invention of the Human New York 1998 ISBN 1 57322 751 X How to Read and Why New York 2000 ISBN 0 684 85906 8 Stories and Poems for Extremely Intelligent Children of All Ages New York 2001 El futur de la imaginacio The Future of the Imagination Barcelona Anagrama Empuries 2002 ISBN 84 7596 927 5 Genius A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds New York 2003 ISBN 0 446 52717 3 Hamlet Poem Unlimited New York 2003 The Best Poems of the English Language From Chaucer Through Frost New York 2004 ISBN 0 06 054041 9 Where Shall Wisdom Be Found New York 2004 ISBN 1 57322 284 4 Jesus and Yahweh The Names Divine 2005 ISBN 1 57322 322 0 American Religious Poems An Anthology By Harold Bloom 2006 ISBN 1 931082 74 X Fallen Angels illustrated by Mark Podwal Yale University Press 2007 ISBN 0 300 12348 5 Till I End My Song A Gathering of Last Poems Harper 2010 ISBN 0 06 192305 2 The Anatomy of Influence Literature as a Way of Life Yale University Press 2011 ISBN 0 300 16760 1 The Shadow of a Great Rock A Literary Appreciation of The King James Bible Yale University Press 2011 ISBN 0 300 16683 4 The Daemon Knows Literary Greatness and the American Sublime Spiegel amp Grau 2015 ISBN 0 812 99782 4 Falstaff Give Me Life Scribner 2017 ISBN 978 1 5011 6413 2 Cleopatra I Am Fire and Air Scribner 2017 ISBN 978 1 5011 6416 3 Lear The Great Image of Authority Scribner 2018 ISBN 978 1 5011 6419 4 Iago The Strategies of Evil Scribner 2018 ISBN 978 1 5011 6422 4 Macbeth A Dagger of the Mind Scribner 2019 ISBN 978 1 5011 6425 5 Possessed by Memory The Inward Light of Criticism Knopf 2019 ISBN 978 0 5255 2088 7 Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles The Power of the Reader s Mind Over a Universe of Death Yale 2020 ISBN 978 0300247282 The Bright Book of Life Novels to Read and Re read Knopf 2020 ISBN 978 0525657262 Articles edit On Extended Wings Archived August 15 2017 at the Wayback Machine Wallace Stevens Longer Poems By Helen Hennessy Vendler Review The New York Times October 5 1969 Poets meeting in the heyday of their youth A Single Summer With Lord Byron The New York Times February 15 1970 An angel s spirit in a decaying and active body Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times November 22 1970 The Use of Poetry Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times November 12 1975 Northrop Frye exalting the designs of romance The Secular Scripture Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times April 18 1976 On Solitude in America Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times August 4 1977 The Critic Poet Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times February 5 1978 A Fusion of Traditions The Collected Works of Isaac Rosenberg Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times July 22 1979 Straight Forth Out of Self The New York Times June 22 1980 The Heavy Burden of the Past Poets The New York Times January 4 1981 The Pictures of the Poet The Painting and Drawings of William Blake by Martin Butlin Vol I Text Vol II Plates review The New York Times January 3 1982 A Novelist s Bible The Story of the Stories The Chosen People and Its God By Dan Jacobson review The New York Times October 17 1982 Isaac Bashevis Singer s Jeremiad The Penitent By Isaac Bashevis Singer review The New York Times September 25 1983 Domestic Derangements A Late Divorce By A B Yehoshua Translated by Hillel Halkin review The New York Times February 19 1984 War Within the Walls In the Freud Archives By Janet Malcolm review The New York Times May 27 1984 His Long Ordeal by Laughter Zuckerman Bound A Trilogy and Epilogue By Philip Roth review The New York Times May 19 1985 A Comedy of Worldly Salvation The Good Apprentice By Iris Murdoch review The New York Times January 12 1986 Freud the Greatest Modern Writer review The New York Times March 23 1986 Passionate Beholder of America in Trouble Look Homeward A Life of Thomas Wolfe By David Herbert Donald review The New York Times February 8 1987 The Book of the Father The Messiah of Stockholm By Cynthia Ozick review The New York Times March 22 1987 Still Haunted by Covenant Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine review The New York Times January 31 1988 New Heyday of Gnostic Heresies Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times April 26 1992 A Jew Among the Cossacks The first English translation of Isaac Babel s journal about his service with the Russian cavalry 1920 Diary By Isaac Babel review The New York Times June 4 1995 Kaddish By Leon Wieseltier review The New York Times October 4 1998 View On First Looking into Gates s Crichton The New York Times June 4 2000 What Ho Malvolio Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine The election as Shakespeare might have seen it The New York Times December 6 2000 Macbush play Vanity Fair April 2004 The Lost Jewish Culture Archived January 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 54 11 June 28 2007 44 47 reviews The Dreams of the Poem Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain 950 1492 translated edited and with an introduction by Peter Cole The Glories of Yiddish Archived January 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 55 17 November 6 2008 reviews History of the Yiddish Language by Max Weinreich edited by Paul Glasser translated from the Yiddish by Shlomo Noble with the assistance of Joshua A Fishman Yahweh Meets R Crumb Archived October 4 2015 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 56 19 December 3 2009 reviews The Book of Genesis illustrated by R Crumb Will This Election Be the Mormon Breakthrough Archived June 6 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times November 12 2011 Richard III Victim or Monster Asks Harold Bloom Archived July 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine Newsweek February 11 2013 Introduction to The Invention of Influence by Peter Cole Archived December 3 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Tablet January 21 2014 Reference Series editBloom s Bio Critiques Series Bloom s Literary Criticism 74 Bloom s Modern Critical Interpretations Series Bloom s Literary Criticism 74 Bloom s Major Short Story Writers Series Bloom s Literary Criticism 74 See also editCovering cherub List of thinkers influenced by deconstruction School of resentmentReferences edit Faculty English Yale University Archived from the original on March 22 2019 Retrieved March 27 2018 Harold Bloom Oxford Bibliographies Archived from the original on October 19 2022 Retrieved April 2 2021 Miller Mary Alice How Harold Bloom Selected His Top 12 American Authors Vanity Fair Archived from the original on July 12 2017 Retrieved March 27 2018 Romano Carlin April 24 2011 Harold Bloom by the Numbers The Chronicle Review The Chronicle of Higher Education Archived from the original on April 9 2019 Retrieved June 25 2013 a b Begley Adam September 24 1994 Review Colossus Among Critics Harold Bloom The New York Times New York Archived from the original on August 23 2017 Retrieved February 8 2017 APS Member History American Philosophical Society Archived from the original on December 20 2021 Retrieved December 20 2021 a b c d e f Smith Dinitia October 14 2019 Harold Bloom Critic Who Championed Western Canon Dies at 89 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 14 2019 Retrieved October 14 2019 Redfield Marc 2003 Literature Incorporated In Herman Peter C ed Historicizing Theory New York City SUNY Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 7914 5962 1 Collins Glenn January 16 2006 New Bronx Library Meets Old Need The New York Times Archived from the original on April 17 2009 Retrieved February 23 2010 Harold Bloom Biography eNotes com eNotes Archived from the original on November 23 2019 Retrieved March 27 2018 a b c Harold Bloom The Shadow of a Great Rock Bookworm KCRW Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved March 4 2012 Collins Glenn January 16 2006 New Bronx Library Meets Old Need The New York Times Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved February 8 2017 Bloom Harold 2004 The Best Poems of the English Language From Chaucer Through Robert Frost HarperCollins p 1942 Harold Bloom facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Harold Bloom www encyclopedia com Archived from the original on May 1 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 International Who s Who of Authors and Writers 2004 19th ed London Europa Publications 2003 p 60 ISBN 978 1 85743 179 7 Harold Bloom Introduction in Harold Bloom ed C S Lewis New York Chelsea House 2006 p 1 Tanenhaus Sam May 20 2011 Harold Bloom An Uncommon Reader The New York Times Archived from the original on October 4 2015 Retrieved February 16 2016 Collegium Ralstonianum apud Savannenses Home Ralston ac Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Retrieved January 21 2014 Fish Stanley November 8 2010 The Woe Is Us Books The New York Times Archived from the original on January 16 2011 Retrieved January 10 2011 Bloom Harold February 23 2012 The Grand Comedian Visits the Bible by Harold Bloom The New York Review of Books Nybooks com Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved June 25 2013 a b Woo Elaine October 14 2019 Harold Bloom author of Anxiety of Influence who fought modern trends dies at 89 Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 15 2019 Retrieved October 16 2019 Laura Quinney November 27 2005 An Interview with Harold Bloom Romantic Circles University of Colorado Boulder Archived from the original on March 28 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 Begley Adam September 25 1994 Colossus Among Critics Harold Bloom The New York Times Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved October 15 2019 Wolf Naomi February 20 2004 The Silent Treatment New York Archived from the original on February 17 2007 Retrieved January 20 2007 D addario Daniel May 11 2015 10 Questions with Harold Bloom Time Magazine Hartman Geoffrey H 2007 Criticism in the Wilderness The Study of Literature Today Yale University Press p 102 ISBN 9780300123982 YEATS by Harold Bloom www kirkusreviews com July 21 2019 Archived from the original on October 16 2019 Retrieved October 16 2019 Wallace Stevens The Poems of Our Climate Cornell University Press Archived from the original on October 16 2019 Retrieved October 16 2019 Pakenham Michael March 23 2003 In Full Bloom Guerrilla In Our Midst The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on October 18 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 Bloom Harold 1970 Yeats New York Oxford University Press p 4 Map of Misreading p 10 The Flight to Lucifer review Archived from the original on July 20 2013 Retrieved September 5 2012 Bloom Harold The Western Canon The Books and Schools of the Ages New York Harcourt Brace amp Company 1994 p 5 Rust Richard Dilworth 1993 Book review Journal of Mormon History 19 2 144 147 Bloom 1996 p 5 Bloom Harold A Reading in The Gospel of Thomas The Hidden Sayings of Jesus English translation and critical edition of the Coptic text by Marvin W Meyer San Francisco HarperSanFrancisco 1992 pp 115 and 119 Mayer Marvin Introduction The Gospel of Thomas San Francisco HarperSanFrancisco 1992 p 9 Meyer 1992 p 19 Meyer 1992 p 119 Bloom 1994 p 2 Bloom 1994 p 11 a b Pearson Jesse December 2 2008 Harold Bloom VICE United States Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved June 25 2013 Bloom 1994 pp 2 3 Bloom 1994 pp 24 5 a b Harold Bloom December 2 2008 Archived from the original on August 29 2022 Retrieved August 29 2022 Bloom Harold Shakespeare The Invention of the Human New York Riverhead 1998 p xix Harold Bloom On the Playing Field of Poetry Open Source with Christopher Lydon www radioopensource org July 5 2011 Archived from the original on March 28 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 Will This Election Be the Mormon Breakthrough Archived June 6 2023 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times November 12 2011 Presidential Lectures Harold Bloom Interviews prelectur stanford edu Archived from the original on February 6 2006 Retrieved March 27 2018 M H Abrams The Fourth Dimension of a Poem WW Norton 2012 Antonio Weiss Spring 1991 Harold Bloom The Art of Criticism No 1 Paris Review Spring 1991 118 Archived from the original on February 12 2021 Retrieved October 27 2010 Paul Fry Engl 300 Introduction To Theory Of Literature Archived April 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine Lecture 14 Influence Open Yale lectures on the influence of Bloom and Eliot Interview with Harold Bloom Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts Stanford University Archived from the original on June 20 2015 Retrieved March 15 2014 Excerpted from Interview Harold Bloom interviewed by Robert Moynihan Diacritics A Review of Contemporary Criticism vol 13 No 3 Fall 1983 pp 57 68 Candidates for Survival A talk with Harold Bloom Boston Review February 1989 Archived March 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine Bloom Harold 2002 Genius a mosaic of one hundred exemplary creative minds New York Warner Books p 648 ISBN 0 446 69129 1 There are a few affinities except perhaps with the admirable Antonia Byatt in the generation after novelists I also now admire like Will Self Peter Ackroyd and John Banville Dumbing Down American Readers Boston Globe September 24 2003 Archived June 17 2006 at the Wayback Machine Bloom Harold 2003 Preface Snake s hands the fiction of John Crowley Canton OH Cosmos Books p 10 ISBN 1 58715 509 5 Little Big Deep Vellum Publishing Bloom Harold 2020 The Bright Book of Life Novels to Read and Reread Alfred A Knopf p 504 Hollander John 2002 Enriching Shadow A F Moritz s Early Poems in Moritz A F ed Early Poems Toronto Insomniac Press p 17 ISBN 9781897414774 Harold Bloom ed Modern Critical Interpretations Jay Wright New York Chelsea House 2003 Bloom Harold 2020 Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles The Power of the Reader s Mind Over a Universe of Death Yale University Press p 31 Harold Bloom ed Modern Critical Interpretations Thomas Pynchon s Gravity s Rainbow New York Chelsea House 1986 Kermode Frank October 12 2002 Review Genius by Harold Bloom The Guardian London Archived from the original on March 18 2017 Retrieved December 11 2016 a b Books Used New and Out of Print Books We Buy and Sell Powell s Powell s Books The World s Largest Independent Bookstore www powells com Archived from the original on March 28 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shapiro James November 1 1998 Soul of the Age The New York Times New York Archived from the original on August 28 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 Visionary Company Boston Review Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Retrieved September 23 2015 Miss Maya Angelou cannot write her way out of a paper bag Kenton Robinson Foe To Those Who Would Shape Literature To Their Own End Dissent in Bloom Hartford Courant October 4 1994 E 1 Koski Lorna April 26 2011 The Full Harold Bloom Women s Wear Daily Archived from the original on June 1 2013 Retrieved October 19 2012 Bloom Harold 2009 quoted in Somers Willett Susan B A The Cultural Politics of Slam Poetry University of Michigan Press p 21 U K s Lessing wins Nobel Prize in literature msn com Associated Press October 11 2007 Archived from the original on April 4 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 Walker Joseph January 8 2012 Group lists Top Ten Anti Mormon Statements of 2011 Deseret News Archived from the original on March 13 2012 Retrieved January 10 2012 Harold Bloom Obituary The Guardian October 15 2019 Archived from the original on November 18 2021 Retrieved November 18 2021 a b c Bloom s Literary Criticism Infobase Publishing Archived from the original on July 9 2023 Retrieved August 4 2022 Further reading editAllen Graham 1994 Harold Bloom Poetics of Conflict New York NY Harvester Wheatsheaf Basbanes Nicholas A 2005 Every Book Its Reader The Power of the Printed Word to Stir the World New York HarperCollins pp 224 238 ISBN 9780060593230 Bielik Robson Agata 2011 The Saving Lie Harold Bloom and Deconstruction Northwestern ISBN 978 0 8101 2728 9 permanent dead link Bloom Harold May 24 2003 The sage of Concord The Guardian Archived from the original on June 25 2008 Retrieved November 9 2005 Bloom Harold Article on Ralph Waldo Emerson Guardian Unlimited Bloom Harold Excerpts from various Bloom interviews The Stanford Presidential Lecture Series Archived from the original on February 6 2006 Retrieved April 13 2004 Bloom Harold September 24 2003 Dumbing down American readers The Boston Globe Archived from the original on June 17 2006 Retrieved April 13 2004 Bloom Harold July 11 2000 Can 35 Million Book Buyers Be Wrong Yes The Wall Street Journal His famous criticism of the Harry Potter series Bloom Harold October 12 2008 Out of Panic Self Reliance The New York Times Archived from the original on May 31 2023 Retrieved February 8 2017 Bloom Harold List of Bloom s contributions to The New York Review of Books The New York Times Archived from the original on July 14 2009 Retrieved December 30 2008 Harold Bloom 1930 Contemporary Literary Criticism Contemporary Literary Criticism Series Vol 24 Detroit Gale 1983 pp 70 83 ISBN 9780810301115 Burrow Colin The Magic Bloomschtick review of Harold Bloom The American Canon Literary Genius from Emerson to Pynchon edited by David Mikics Library of America October 2019 426 pp ISBN 978 1 59853 640 9 London Review of Books vol 41 no 22 21 November 2019 pp 21 25 Harold Bloom will be remembered as a great provoker of thought of laughter and of resistance He didn t permanently reconfigure the literary landscape but the idiosyncratic path he tracked across it is one few could follow Final two sentences of Burrow s review p 25 De Bolla Peter 1988 Harold Bloom Toward Historical Rhetorics New York NY Routledge Modern American Critics since 1955 Dictionary of Literary Biography Gale 67 1988 Fite David 1985 Harold Bloom The Rhetoric of Romantic Vision Amherst University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 9780870234842 Moynihan Robert 1986 A Recent Imagining Interviews with Harold Bloom Geoffrey Hartman J Hillis Miller Paul De Man Archon Saurberg Lars Ole 1997 Versions of the Past Visions of the Future The Canonical in the Criticism of T S Eliot F R Leavis Northrop Frye and Harold Bloom New York NY St Martin s Press Scherr Barry J 1995 D H Lawrence s Response to Plato A Bloomian Interpretation New York NY P Lang Sellars Roy Allen Graham eds 2007 The Salt Companion to Harold Bloom Salt Publishing ISBN 9781876857202 Interview with Bloom on NPR regarding his book Jesus and Yahweh The Names Divine All Things Considered NPR Archived from the original on March 2 2022 Retrieved April 2 2018 Interview with Bloom regarding his book How to Read and Why The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer 2000 Archived from the original on November 13 2012 Retrieved August 29 2017 God and Harold at Yale Claremont Review April 2014 Archived from the original on October 8 2006 Lesinska Ieva October 26 2004 Interview regarding Breakfast with Brontosaurus Eurozine Archived from the original on November 1 2005 Retrieved October 29 2005 Lydon Christopher September 3 2003 Radio interview Harvard Law Weblogs Archived from the original on October 6 2008 Retrieved March 21 2004 Rothenberg Jennie July 16 2003 Interview with Jennie Rothenberg The Atlantic Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved March 7 2017 Wood James May 1 2006 The Misreader The New Republic Archived from the original on July 9 2023 Retrieved October 8 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Harold Bloom nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harold Bloom Official website at Yale University Harold Bloom on Charlie Rose Appearances on C SPAN In Depth interview with Bloom May 4 2003 C SPAN Harold Bloom collected news and commentary at The New York Times Harold Bloom at Stanford Presidential Lectures Oventile Robert Savino August 8 2015 Anarchic Transports A Review of Harold Bloom s The Daemon Knows Literary Greatness and the American Sublime Review Sobriquet Magazine Oventile Robert Savino January 16 2024 Daemonic Muses A Review of Harold Bloom s and Cormac McCarthy s Final Works Review Ballast Journal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Bloom amp oldid 1201888798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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