Rosemary Woolf

Rosemary Woolf
Born 27 December 1925
Died 13 April 1978 (aged 52)
Alma mater St Hugh's College, Oxford, B. Litt., 1949
Occupation Scholar of medieval literature, instructor of English literature
Organization University College of Hull, Somerville College
Parent(s) Gladys Capua Woolf and C. M. Woolf

Rosemary Estelle Woolf (27 December 1925 13 April 1978) was an English scholar of medieval literature, known especially for her work on medieval English religious lyrics, The English Religious Lyric in the Middle Ages.[1]

Biography

Woolf was the daughter of British film executive C. M. Woolf. She was the first woman in her family to attend university, receiving a B. Litt. from St Hugh's College, Oxford in 1949. She became a lecturer at the University College of Hull in 1948.[2] She became a lecturer in English at Somerville College, Oxford University in 1961, teaching Old and Middle English literature and the history of the English language.[3]

Notes

  1. Hughes 206.
  2. Spevack-Hussman, Helga (1995). "Rosemary Woolf (1925-1978)". In Helen Damico. Medieval Scholarship: Literature and Philology. Taylor & Francis. pp. 439–. ISBN 9780815328902.
  3. Boro, Joyce (2005). "Rosemary Estelle Wolf (1925-1978): A Serious Scholar". In Jane Chance. Women Medievalists And The Academy. U of Wisconsin P. pp. 825–38. ISBN 9780299207502.

References

  • Hughes, Geoffrey (2006). "God's Wounds". An Encyclopedia of Swearing: The Social History of Oaths, Profanity, Foul Language, And Ethnic Slurs in the English-speaking World. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 205–206. ISBN 9780765612311.


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