Charles Moseley (writer)

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Dr Charles W. R. D. Moseley
Charles-moseley-writer-cambridge.jpg
Charles Moseley, Reach, 2022
Born (1941-04-24) 24 April 1941 (age 82)
Lancashire, England
Education
OccupationWriter
Spouses
  • Jennifer Mary Williamson
    (m. 1962;died 2009)
  • Rosanna Price (nee Gore)
    (m. 2017)
Website charlesmoseley.com

Charles Moseley (born 24 April 1941), who also publishes as C. W. R. D. Moseley, is an English writer, scholar, and teacher, and a former fellow of Wolfson College and Life Fellow of Hughes Hall in Cambridge, [1] as well as a fellow of the English Association, the Society of Antiquaries of London, and the Royal Society of Arts.

Contents

Education

Moseley was born in Lancashire and educated at Beach Road County Primary School, Cleveleys, Arnold School, Blackpool (1952–59), Queens' College, Cambridge (BA, 1962), and received his PhD (entitled "Mandeville's travels: a study of the book and its importance in England, 1356–1750"). [2] from the University of East Anglia in 1971.

Career

From 1962 to 1973, while completing his PhD, Moseley worked in publishing, for Cambridge University Press as a management trainee, and subsequently for the University Tutorial Press as a commissioning editor. He taught English and Classics at The Leys School, Cambridge, full-time from 1973 to 1980 and part-time from 1980 to 1996, while also College Lecturer in English at Magdalene College from 1980 to 1986 and Director of Studies in English at Wolfson College from 1988 to 2000. In 2000 he became Director of Studies in English at Hughes Hall, and also served as Senior Tutor 2000-03 and Tutor 2003-08. From 2004-09 he was also Director of Studies at St Edmund's College. He was an Affiliated Lecturer of the Cambridge Faculty of English, and from 1992 to 2005 was Programme Director, for the University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, of the International Summer School in English Literature, and from 1994 to 2005 the first Programme Director for the International Summer School in Shakespeare.

He was elected to fellowships of the Royal Geographical Society in 1972, of the Royal Society of Arts in 1994, of the Society of Antiquaries in 1999, [3] and the English Association in 2001. [4] He is also a member of the Society for Nautical Research, the Classical Association, and the Arctic Club, and was a consultant for the annual Responsibility of Wealth programmes run in Cambridge for the Society of International Business Fellows.

Scholarship, teaching and writing

Moseley's principal interests are in the mediaeval and early modern periods, particularly Chaucer, Sir John Mandeville, Shakespeare, Milton, and the European emblem.

His Shakespearean work has centred on the history plays: between 1966 and 1974 he edited five Shakespeare plays for the University Tutorial Press – The Winter's Tale, 1 Henry IV, 2 Henry IV, Richard III, & Othello—and later wrote two studies for Penguin Books, Shakespeare's History Plays, Richard II to Henry V: The Making of a King (1988; digitally reissued, 2010) & Shakespeare: Richard III: A Critical Study (1989). More recently, he has written five digitally published guides for students: Reading Shakespeare's History Plays (2001), A Very Brief Introduction to Theatre and Theatres of Shakespeare's Time (2007), Shakespeare's Richard III: A Discussion (2007), Shakespeare's The Tempest (2007), & Shakespeare's King Henry IV (2007).

Moseley's Penguin Classics edition of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville (1983, revised and extended 2005) remains the standard edition for British and US universities, [5] and his translation is noted for "convey[ing] the elegant style of the original". [6] It was followed by two Penguin guides to Chaucer, Chaucer: The Knight's Tale: A Critical Study (1986) and Chaucer: The Pardoner's Tale: A Critical Study (1987). A Century of Emblems: An Introduction to the Renaissance Emblem (1989) is a rare and valuable guide to its subject, [7] and The Poetic Birth: Milton's Poems of 1645 (1991) was subsequently issued by Penguin, without the Latin poems, as Milton: The English Poems of 1645 (1992). In 2021, he edited Engaging with Chaucer: Theory, Practice, Reading (Berghahn: New York and Oxford). Moseley has published more than 65 scholarly articles, the majority concerning Chaucer, Mandeville, and Shakespeare, and early modern theatre, and is a frequent reviewer for Modern Language Review and the Yearbook of English Studies. He also wrote the British Council Writers and their Work guide to J. R. R. Tolkien (1997).

A second strand of Moseley's work concerns personal and local history, particularly the effects of modernity on village life. A long-standing resident of Reach, he has published two studies, Reach: A Brief History of a Fenland Village (1988) and A Field Full of Folk: A Village Elegy (1995; as Out of Reach, 2010). The latter includes a more personal memoir, and has an autobiographical prequel, Between the Tides: A Lancashire Youth (2014). A further memoir, Latitude North (2015), concerns Moseley's interest in polar history, biology, and historical experience. He also wrote A Brief Architectural Guide to the Church of St Mary the Virgin, Swaffham Prior (1980), and with the poet Clive Wilmer edited Cambridge Observed: An Anthology (1998). His Coming to Terms: Cambridge In and Out (2017) is a mixture of personal memoir and anecdote about the Cambridge and Cambridgeshire in which he has lived and worked for 60 years. He has also published the much praised Hungry Heart Roaming (Eyewear, 2021), a very personal engagement, prompted by place and travel, with European history from the Fall of Troy to the Fall of Berlin in 1945. In 2022 his To Everything a Season: The View from the Fen, a closely and affectionately observed account of the changing year in East Anglia, was published by Merlin Unwin Books. Also in 2022, his Crossroad: A Pilgrimage of Unknowing was published by Darton London and Todd. This, the first explicitly religious book he has written, picks up once more the journey/wandering/pilgrimage theme that fascinates him, but is also a sustained meditation on the nature and force of memory in a place, and the possibility of knowledge and certainty.

Moseley's influence as a teacher and lecturer is shown in his long association with the Cambridge International Summer Schools, where his Programme Directorship in English Literature saw the numbers of courses and registrants expand considerably, and the foundation of a distinct Shakespeare Summer School which after his retirement was directed by Catherine Alexander and Fred Parker. [8] He was a founding partner of and Literature Editor for Humanities-ebooks, a digital academic publisher committed to lower prices for readers and higher royalty payments for authors. He has three times been an Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English Speaking Union of the United States (1993, 1995, 2000), is a frequent lecturer on study cruises for Saga, Fred. Olsen Cruise Lines, and Voyages of Adventure, and has been a plenary speaker at conferences in Lisbon, Bucharest, Innsbruck, and Szeged. [9]

Moseley's former pupils include Stephanie Merritt, F. C. Malby (novelist), Emily Maitlis, Professor Dr S. I. Sobecki (University of Toronto), Professor Russell Hillier (Providence College), Professor Katherine Steele Brokaw (University of California, Merced), Cord-Christian Casper, (Department of English, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Professor Greg Clingham, Dr Richard Keith (Central School of Speech and Drama), Gavin Tranter (barrister), Mark Bishop (judge and Anglican priest, Chancellor of the Diocese of Lincoln), Nicholas J. Hoffman (financier), James Marshall CBE, and Matthew Rycroft CBE.

Personal life

Moseley's memoirs include several unusual experiences for an academic, including a stint as a deckhand on deep-sea trawlers, [10] and extensive travels in Antarctica, Greenland, Spitsbergen, and Iceland. In 1976 he was Deputy Leader of an expedition that sledged across the Spitsbergen icecap. [11] He also maintained a smallholding in Reach for more than 20 years. [12]

In 1962 Moseley married Jennifer Mary Williamson (19 June 1940 – 22 October 2009). They had two children.
In 2017 he married Rosanna Price (Gore) – born 2 April 1960 – graduate of Emmanuel College, Cambridge and an acupuncturist and Zero Balancing practitioner in Cambridge (now also known as Rosanna Moseley Gore). [13]

Bibliography

Books

Chapters and articles

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "The Fellowship | Hughes Hall". Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  2. Mandeville's travels: a study of the book and its importance in England, 1356–1750. British Library EThOS (Ph.D). 1971. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  3. "Fellows Directory - Society of Antiquaries". Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  4. "List of Fellows — University of Leicester". www2.le.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014.
  5. It is currently a set text at the universities of London Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine , Warwick, East Anglia, Southampton, California-Berkeley, Missouri-St Louis, and Hong Kong, among others.
  6. Mariano Akerman, A review of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville at http://im-akermariano.blogspot.co.uk/2012_09_01_archive.html
  7. Peter M. Daly, 'A review of C. W. R. D. Moseley, A Century of Emblems, in Emblematica: An Interdisciplinary Journal for Emblem Studies 5.1 (Summer 1991)
  8. University of Cambridge International Summer Schools: 90th Anniversary, 1923–2013 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Institute of Continuing Education, 2013), pp. 13, 16.
  9. "Charles Moseley". Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  10. Between the Tides (Burscough: Beaten Track Publishing, 2014), pp. 213–41.
  11. Latitude North (London: IndieBooks, 2015), ch. 4 'A Cold Coast'.
  12. A Field Full of Folk: A Village Elegy (London: Aurum Press, 1985; 2/e, as Out of Reach, Cambridge: G. David, 2010), passim.
  13. "Home". tree-of-life-therapy.co.uk.