Notions of Authorship

Image
Pieter Claeszoon - Still Life with a Skull and a Writing Quill
This section brings together resources from the across the Great Writers Inspire site to illustrate how these can be used as a starting point for exploration of or classroom discussion about the authorship. The 'Notions of Authorship' essay introduces the topic and offers suggestions of how to approach it. It also gives examples of resources from the Great Writers Inspire to explore. The introductory essay is aimed at teachers, students and anyone who is interested in literature who wants to put text into context and be inspired by Great Writers. Read the essay
# Title Description Contributor
1 Key Critical Concepts: Authorship In this recording, Emma Smith introduces the concept of authorship as part of our series on Key… Emma Smith
2 Jane Austen's Manuscripts Explored Professor Kathyrn Sutherland from the University of Oxford talks around the manuscripts of Jane… Kathryn Sutherland
3 The Watsons: Jane Austen Practising Professor Kathryn Sutherland from the University of Oxford talks about some of Jane Austen's… Kathryn Sutherland
4 Literature and Form 1: Unreliable Narrators Dr. Catherine Brown offers a series introducing different writing forms and their use in great… Catherine Brown
5 What is a Great Writer? An academic panel discussion. In this panel discussion from the Great Writers Inspire Engage Event workshop, Dr Seamus Perry, Dr… Rebecca Beasley, Ankhi Mukherjee, Peter McDonald, Margaret Kean, Seamus Perry
6 Why Dickens? Dr Robert Douglas-Fairhurst talks of Dickens' life and influences and why these have made his works… Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
7 Pericles, Prince of Tyre Pericles has been on the margins of the Shakespearean canon: this fourteenth lecture in the… Emma Smith
8 George Eliot 3. Reception History In this third and final podcast, Dr Catherine Brown discusses the popularity of George Eliot's work… Catherine Brown
9 Is there ever a Faithful Translation? Second part of the What is Translation podcast series. In this part, the question of whether there… Lorna Hardwick, Oliver Taplin
Subscribe to Notions of Authorship