Eric Griffiths (critic)
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Eric Griffiths | |
|---|---|
| Born | 11 July 1953 Liverpool, England |
| Died | 26 September 2018 (aged 65) |
| Education | |
| Occupation(s) | Academic, literary critic |
Eric Griffiths (11 July 1953 – 26 September 2018) was a British academic and literary critic.
Griffiths was born in Liverpool into what he described as a "Welsh-speaking, chapel-going family",[citation needed] and educated at the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys, Pembroke College, Cambridge, and Princeton University. He was a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1980 until his death in September 2018. Before that Griffiths was a Research Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge.
As well as an academic, Griffiths was also a broadcaster. From 1984, he contributed essays to the BBC Radio 3 series New Premises, introduced by its first producer Thomas (Tom) Sutcliffe, a contemporary at Cambridge. He also appeared in television documentaries, and in 1992 gave the Chatterton Lecture at the British Academy, on Dryden's Past. In 1997 he delivered the F.W. Bateson Memorial Lecture at Oxford University on "The disappointment of Christina G. Rossetti".
Griffiths suffered a stroke in 2011 which seriously impaired his ability to speak. He died on 26 September 2018, aged 65.[1]