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Lionel Stevenson was born on 1902. Discover Lionel Stevenson's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 71 years old?
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He is a member of famous with the age 71 years old group.
Lionel Stevenson Height, Weight & Measurements
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Lionel Stevenson Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Lionel Stevenson worth at the age of 71 years old? Lionel Stevenson’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated
Lionel Stevenson's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Following retirement from Duke he became Visiting Professor at the University of Houston (1973), having previously held visiting professorships at the Universities of Illinois (1952–53) and New York (1967–68) and a visiting lectureship at Oxford (1960–61). He had also taught in the summer sessions at San Francisco State College and the University of Colorado.
His book on the Pre-Raphaelites, which was said to “reaffirm his eminence in the very first rank of Victorian Scholars”, won the Mayflower Cup for the outstanding non-fiction work of 1973. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1951 and a Guggenheim Fellow in 1960.
In the autumn of 1973 he moved to Vancouver to take up appointment as the first Distinguished Professor of English at his alma mater, the University of British Columbia, for the academic year 1973–4. He was due to deliver the Garnett Sedgwick Memorial Lecture there when he died suddenly on 21 December 1973.
In 1954 Stevenson married Lillian Sprague Jones. She brought him a stepdaughter, Marietta, whose later academic and professional success was a source of great pleasure for him. As his widow Lillian married Dr Thomas Clark Pollock, formerly Professor of English and Head of the English Department at the University of New York, in 1975. She died, again a widow, in 2003.
He chaired the editorial committee of the Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards for twenty-five years, each year reading hundreds of poems in order to help select those for inclusion in the Awards’ annual Best Poems compilation. He was first vice-president of the California Federation of Chaparral Poets from 1944 but wrote little poetry in his later years, and then only for private circulation. Nevertheless, he was, at his death, described by Charles D. Perlee (Chairman of the California Fine Arts and Humanities Study Committee) as “one of America’s finest poets”.
At Southern California he was made an associate professor in 1941 and promoted to professor in 1944. In 1955 he accepted appointment as James B. Duke Professor of English Literature at Duke University, remaining in this role until 1972 (when made Professor Emeritus) and serving as chair of the university's English Department from 1964 to 1967.
On returning to America, he spent two further years at Arizona State College before joining the University of Southern California as assistant professor of English in 1937.
Between 1937 and 1973 he contributed more than forty critical and research articles (in addition to numerous reviews and brief notes) to scholarly journals, several such pieces being republished in hard-back anthologies. He wrote introductions for reprints of novels by Thackeray, Meredith, John Galsworthy and George Moore, compiled the first published version of Victorian Fiction: A Guide to Research, and contributed to Encyclopedia Americana and other leading works of reference.
His Oxford thesis on Lady Morgan also appeared in print (entitled, after Morgan's own novel, The Wild Irish Girl) in 1936. It was the first in a succession of in-depth biographical studies for which Stevenson was probably best known by the time of his death thirty-seven years later.
His doctoral dissertation at Berkeley, “The Reflection of the Evolutionary Theory in English Poetry”, attempted the first comprehensive scholarly assessment of poetic engagement with the theory of evolution and, as extensively revised by him, was published under the title Darwin Among the Poets in 1932. Stevenson noted that Browning and Tennyson “startlingly anticipated the evolutionary theory in their early poems, only to shrink from its later developments”, whereas George Meredith “had little perception of the idea till the scientists announced it” but then “devoted himself to it unstintingly”. The book, characterised as “a summary of poetic philosophy in England for the past hundred years”, was immediately influential and “helped shape the interdisciplinary field of science and poetry”.
He was appointed an instructor at Berkeley following the award of his doctorate, and in 1930 he accepted a position as professor and chairman of the English department at Arizona State Teachers College, becoming a naturalised American citizen in the same year. In 1933, at the depth of the Great Depression, the State of Arizona was bankrupt and the college was unable to pay its staff in hard currency. Stevenson took the opportunity for further study and obtained a place at the University of Oxford where, as a student of St Catherine's, he proceeded to a BLitt degree in 1935, submitting a thesis on Sydney, Lady Morgan, and being examined by Edmund Blunden and C. S. Lewis.
He sat on the editorial boards of many leading professional publications and was a member of more than a dozen literary organisations and societies, some of which he represented at international conventions. He was president of the California Writers Club in 1928–30, chair of the Victorian literature section of the Modern Language Association in 1959, and American chair of the Modern Humanities Research Association in 1968–72.
In 1926 he published a slim volume of his own verse, A Pool of Stars, and a substantial treatise on Canada's poetry and prose, Appraisals of Canadian Literature. The latter was well received and for many years regarded as the leading study in its field, Stevenson's “perceptive observations” anticipating those of Northrop Frye. He believed Canadian literature was at an early phase of evolution, saying it had yielded no great novels or plays because these were sophisticated forms driven by the intricacies of social relations, whereas the nation's poetry had flowered as a result of his countrymen's “genuine communion with nature in her pristine power, where civilization has never intruded her confusions”.
He was president of Dickens Fellowship branches in California, wrote for the Fellowship's journal from 1926 onward, and briefly edited the Dickens Studies Newsletter. His 1943 Sewanee Review article on what he called “Dickens’s Dark Novels“ exposed the combination of external political forces and personal crises that had beset their author, adding momentum to the revolution in Dickens studies which Edmund Wilson had set in motion some years earlier.
It has been suggested that Appraisals was influenced in part by Stevenson's religious interest. He had been a member of the Toronto Theosophical Society from its foundation in 1924, and the impact on literature of Darwinism (whereby, in Stevenson's words, “Man became a mere product of the same forces which had shaped the rest of the Cosmos”) became central to his thought and work during the 1920s.
In September 1907 Henry and Mabel Stevenson emigrated to Duncan, British Columbia, hoping Henry might there recover from declining health, but he died within three months of arrival. The residual Stevenson household included and was largely supported by Mabel's brother, George Cary, and in 1918 they removed to Vancouver so that Lionel (then known as Leo, which he came to dislike) could attend the University of British Columbia. He graduated there in 1922, obtained a master's degree from the University of Toronto in the following year, and in 1925 received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley.
Arthur Lionel Stevenson FRSL (1902–1973) was a North American writer and lecturer. A leading authority on the literature of the Victorian period, he published biographies of William Makepeace Thackeray and George Meredith as well as a panoramic study of the English novel. He was James B. Duke Professor of English Literature at Duke University from 1955 until 1972.
Lionel Stevenson was born in Edinburgh on 16 July 1902 and was the only child of Henry and Mabel Rose Stevenson. His mother and his paternal grandmother were both members of the Cary family, decayed Anglo-Irish gentry, and Lionel was both a first and a second cousin of the novelist Joyce Cary.