New Homer title coming January 2023
Oxford Scholarly Editions Online
Explore old texts in new ways
Editor in Chief Michael F. Suarez, S.J.
From Our Blog
Who doesn't like a centenary? Whether solemn, festive, or celebratory, a centenary can be very instructive, whether conducted individually or collectively. It is a way of acknowledging'often honouring'the past and, at the same time, reassessing the present and imagining the future in the context of the previous event or exemplary person.
Posted on August 19, 2018
Read the blog post
Emily Bront«, born 200 years ago on 30 July 1818, would become part of one of the most important literary trinities alongside her sisters, Charlotte and Anne. Emily's only novel, Wuthering Heights, polarised contemporary critics and defied Victorian convention by depicting characters from 'low and rustic life.'
Posted on July 30, 2018
Read the blog post
Given his near half-century career, the Romantic-era publisher Joseph Johnson (1738-1809) left behind a notably small archive. We know from a letter he wrote on today's date in 1799 that he destroyed some of his correspondence and business documents while serving a two-year sentence for seditious libel in King's Bench Prison (imprisonment was a fate that progressive publishers were all too familiar with during the 1790s).
Posted on July 23, 2018
Read the blog post
At a Cambridge court hearing in 1584, Margery Johnson reported that she heard Thomas Wylkinson refer to 'the said Jane Johnson thus 'A pox of God on thee, bitch fox whore, that ever I knew thee.'' If Wylkinson indeed called down such a curse on Jane, he was guilty not of libel, but of slander, a verbal attack on another person. Libel, in contrast, is defined as defamation by written or printed words, pictures, or in any form other than by spoken words or gestures.
Posted on January 16, 2018
Read the blog post
Anyone reading Sophocles' Antigone in the Oxford Classical Text of 1924, edited by A. C. Pearson, will sooner or later come across the following passage. Antigone has defied Creon's decree that the body of her brother Polynices, who had recently fallen in battle when waging war against his homeland of Thebes, should be left unburied; discovered, she has been brought before the new ruler.
Posted on September 7, 2017
Read the blog post
With the summer months having firmly arrived, we thought it was a good time to look at some of the most memorable, and most beautiful literary depictions of summer. From Tennyson's 'perpetual summer' to Charlotte Bronte's balmy summer evenings, and from Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist to the oppressive heat of Shakespeare's 'fair Verona', discover literary summers through the ages'¦
Posted on June 29, 2017
Read the blog post
Posted on June 11, 2017
Read the blog post
How much would you be prepared to pay for a library of forged books? In 2011, the Sheridan Libraries of Johns Hopkins University acquired (at an undisclosed price) the so-called 'Bibliotheca Fictiva', one of the largest collections of forged books and documents.
Posted on June 8, 2017
Read the blog post
Jane Austen is one of the best known and most celebrated authors of British literature, inspiring legions of fans across the globe. With this popularity in mind, we thought it was a good time to test your knowledge of Jane Austen's novels and characters ' with a quiz based on the author's lesser-known quotations. How well do you really know Austen's writings?
Posted on June 7, 2017
Read the blog post
The Wonder, the latest work of Irish-Canadian author Emma Donoghue to light up the fiction best sellers' list (Donoghue's prize-winning 2010 novel Room was the basis for the 2015 Academy-Award winning film), draws upon a very real, very disturbing Victorian phenomenon: the young women and men'but mostly pubescent females'who starved themselves to death to prove some kind of divine or spiritual presence in their lives.
Posted on June 6, 2017
Read the blog post
Any translation is bound to be only partially faithful to the original. Translation is, as the Latin root of the word shows, transference from one language to another. It is not, or should not be, slavish imitation. The Italians have a saying: 'Traduttore traditore' ' 'the translator is a traitor' ' and one has to accept from the start that this is bound to be the case.
Posted on May 26, 2017
Read the blog post
We've highlighted 10 examples of Austen's writing ' all demonstrating her truly unique style. From post-truth sensibilities to taking time to slow down in our everyday lives, and from true love to the fight for female education, discover 10 times that Austen was ahead of the times'¦
Posted on May 27, 2017
Read the blog post
William Shakespeare and Marcus Aurelius (the great stoic philosopher and emperor) have more in common than you might think. They share a recorded birth-date, with Shakespeare baptized on 26 April 1564, and Marcus Aurelius born on 26 April 121 (Shakespeare's actual birth date remains unknown, although he was baptised on 26 April 1564. His birth is traditionally observed and celebrated on 23 April, Saint George's Day).
Posted on April 26, 2017
Read the blog post
Charles Darwin, the English naturalist, geologist, and biologist is known the world over for his contributions to the science of evolution, and his theory of natural selection. Described as one of the most influential figures in human history, his ideas have invited as much controversy as they have scientific debate, with religious, social, and cultural ramifications.
Posted on April 26, 2017
Read the blog post
On 27 December 1831, Charles Darwin set off on a round-the-world survey expedition and adventure on the HMS Beagle. Captained by Robert FitzRoy, the trip (the second voyage of HMS Beagle) lasted until 2 October 1836 and saw the crew visit locations as varied as Brazil, Tierra del Fuego, South Africa, New Zealand, and the Azores.
Posted on April 18, 2017
Read the blog post
The history of English grammar is shrouded in mystery. It's generally thought to begin in the late sixteenth century, with William Bullokar's Pamphlet for Grammar (1586)'but where did Bullokar's inspiration come from? In these times, the structure and rules of English grammar were constructed and contrasted with the Latin.
Posted on January 31, 2017
Read the blog post
We know more about Geoffrey Chaucer's life than we do about most medieval writers. Despite this, it's a truism of Chaucer biography that the records that survive never once describe him as a poet. Less often noticed, however, are the two radically different views of Chaucer as an author we find in roughly contemporaneous portraiture, although the portraits in which we find them are themselves well known.
Posted on February 8, 2017
Read the blog post
If you have ever tried to learn another language you already know that, even for beginners, translation is never simply a matter of looking the "foreign" words up in a dictionary and writing them down. The result is gibberish, because no two languages work in exactly the same way at the level of grammar (what the rules are) and syntax (how the sentence puts them to work).
Posted on February 1, 2017
Read the blog post
It's almost that time of year again, when families, friends and acquaintances get together to host a Burns supper, and celebrate the life and poetry of Robert Burns. Variously known as Rabbie Burns, the Bard of Ayrshire or the Ploughman Poet, Burns is widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and indeed celebrated worldwide.
Posted on January 24, 2017
Read the blog post
In Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, Titus's daughter Lavinia is brutally raped by Demetrius and Chiron. They prevent her from denouncing them by cutting out her tongue, and cutting off her hands. But as we see in the passage below, Lavinia nevertheless communicates their crime by pointing to a passage of Ovid's Metamorphoses describing Tereus's rape of Philomela.
Posted on January 19, 2017
Read the blog post
Do you need some inspiration for your New Year's resolutions? If you're in a resolution rut and feeling some of that winter gloom, then you're not alone. To help you on your way to an exciting start to 2017, we've enlisted the help of some of history's greatest literary and philosophical figures'on their own resolutions, and inspiring thoughts for the New Year.
Posted on December 13, 2022
Read the blog post
How are you spending New Year's Day this year? If your mind has turned to resolutions and plans for the coming months, or even if you've got a touch of the January blues, then you're in good company. To mark the start of 2017, we've taken a snapshot of poems, novels, and letters from famed historical and literary figures, all composed on January 1st.
Posted on January 1, 2017
Read the blog post
Scotland has inspired much celebrated poetry over the ages, from the stirring verses of Robert Burns, to the imaginative tales of Robert Louis Stevenson and Walter Scott. These poets are now household names, but how many outside of Scotland have heard of William Dunbar or James Hogg?
Posted on December 3, 2016
Read the blog post
Few have heard of him today, but Jacob Tonson the Elder (1656?-1736) was undoubtedly one of the most important booksellers in the history of English literature. He numbered Addison, Behn, Congreve, Dryden, Echard, Oldmixon, Prior, Steele, and Vanbrugh among those canonical authors whom he published. His reputation was international, and the quality and range of his classical editions remained a benchmark throughout the eighteenth century.
Posted on November 27, 2016
Read the blog post
Samuel Pepys penned his famous diaries between January 1660, and May of 1669. During the course of this nine year period, England witnessed some of the most important events in its political and social history. The diaries are over a million words long and recount in minute and often incredibly personal detail, events such as the restoration of the monarchy, the Second Anglo-Dutch War, the Great Fire, and Great Plague of London.
Posted on November 23, 2016
Read the blog post
History and poetry hardly seem obvious bed-fellows ' a historian is tasked with discovering the truth about the past, whereas, as Aristotle said, 'a poet's job is to describe not what has happened, but the kind of thing that might'. But for the Romans, the connections between them were deep: historia . . . proxima poetis ('history is closest to the poets'), as Quintilian remarked in the first century AD. What did he mean by that?
Posted on February 7, 2016
Read the blog post
Like Mansfield Park, the novel that precedes it, Emma is a closely defended study of English life. Begun, according to Cassandra Austen's chronology of her sister's compositions, 21 January 1814, before the Fall of Paris and Napoleon's exile to Elba, it was completed on 29 March 1815, just months before the battle of Waterloo (June 1815) and Napoleon's second and final abdication.
Posted on December 15, 2015
Read the blog post
The conspirators in what we now know as the Gunpowder Plot failed in their aspiration to blow up the House of Lords on the occasion of the state opening of parliament in the hope of killing the King and a multitude of peers. Why do we continue to remember the plot? The bonfires no longer articulate anti-Roman Catholicism, though this attitude formally survived until 2013 in the prohibition against the monarch or the heir to the throne marrying a Catholic.
Posted on November 3, 2015
Read the blog post
Young Cressingham, one of the witty contrivers of Thomas Middleton's and John Webster's comedy Anything for a Quiet Life (1621), faces a financial problem. His father is wasting his inheritance, and his new stepmother ' a misogynistic caricature of the wayward, wicked woman ' has decided to seize the family's wealth into her own hands, disinheriting her husband's children.
Posted on October 24, 2015
Read the blog post
The shadow of the Roman poets falls right across the entire western literary tradition: from Vergil's Aeneid, about the fall of Troy, the wooden horse, and the founding of Rome; through the great love poets, Catullus, Propertius, and Tibullus; Ovid's Metamorphoses, treasure-house of myth for the Renaissance and Shakespeare; to Horace's Dulce et decorum est, echoing through the twentieth century. We all take it for granted '¦ so now's the time to check your working.
Posted on October 12, 2015
Read the blog post
Only Oscar Wilde could be quite so frivolous when describing a matter as grave as the punctuation of poetry, something that causes particular grief in our attempts to understand ancient texts. Their writers were not so obliging as to provide their poems with punctuation marks, nor to distinguish between capitals and small letters.
Posted on August 15, 2015
Read the blog post
For over 100 years, Oxford University Press has been publishing scholarly editions of major works. Prominent scholars reviewed and delivered authoritative versions of authors' work with notes on citations, textual variations, references, and commentary added line by line'from alternate titles for John Donne's poetry to biographical information on recipients of Adam Smith's correspondence.
Posted on July 18, 2015
Read the blog post
In continuation of our Word of the Year celebrations, I'm presenting my annual butchering of Shakespeare (previous victims include MacBeth and Hamlet). Of the many terms of endearment the Bard used -- from lambkin to mouse -- babe was not among them.
Posted on November 20, 2014
Read the blog post
William Shakespeare was born 450 years ago this month, in April 1564, and to celebrate Oxford Scholarly Editions Online is testing your knowledge on Shakespeare quotes. Do you know your sonnets from your speeches? Find out...
Posted on April 14, 2014
Read the blog post
By Roger Kuin What does Sir Philip Sidney's correspondence teach us about the man and his world? You have to realise what letters were, what they were like, and what they were for. Some of them were like our e-mails: brief and to the point. Other letters are long and more like a personal form of news media: meant to inform the recipient (often Sidney himself) about what is happening in the world of politics.
Posted on April 28, 2014
Read the blog post
April 2014 sees Shakespeare mature to the ripe old age of 450, and to celebrate we have collected a multitude of quotes from the famous bard in the below graphic, crafting his features with his own words.
Posted on April 8, 2014
Read the blog post
By Andrew Zurcher As Women's History Month draws to a close in the United Kingdom, it is a good moment to reflect on the history of women's writing in Oxford's scholarly editions. In particular, as one of the two editors responsible for early modern writers in the sprawling collections of Oxford Scholarly Editions Online (OSEO), I have been going through the edited texts of women writers included in the OSEO project.
Posted on March 28, 2014
Read the blog post
By Daniel Parker Snow is falling and your bulging stocking is being hung up above a roaring log fire. The turkey is burning in the oven as you eat your body weight in novelty chocolate. And now your weird, slightly sinister Uncle Frank is coming towards you brandishing mistletoe. This can mean only one thing. In the wise (and slightly altered) words of Noddy Holder: It's OSEO Christmas!
Posted on December 17, 2013
Read the blog post
Celebrate Halloween with Shakespeare and Oxford Scholarly Editions Online (OSEO)! Test your knowledge on which characters disguise themselves, what the witches say around their cauldron, why ghosts haunt the living, and who plays tricks in the night '¦
Posted on October 25, 2013
Read the blog post
By Katherine Stileman While we regularly bring you the thoughts and insights of Oxford University Press (OUP) authors and editors, we rarely reveal the people who work behind the scenes. I sat down with Oxford University Press Digital Development Editor, Sarah Brett, to find out more about her history with OUP.
Posted on December 14, 2013
Read the blog post
By Daniel Parker It's time to dust off your racket and wrestle the tennis balls from your dog's mouth. Wimbledon 2013 is upon us! Using Oxford Scholarly Editions Online (OSEO) as my experienced, disciplined, but approachable coach, I cast a hawk-eye over OSEO's collection of Shakespeare texts to look for references to tennis.
Posted on June 28, 2013
Read the blog post
Four hundred and twenty years ago, on Wednesday 30 May 1593, Christopher Marlowe was famously killed under mysterious circumstances at the young age of 29. Test your knowledge on this enigmatic figure of history. Do you know when Marlowe was born? Who killed him and why? Find out answers to these and much more in our quiz. Good luck!
Posted on May 30, 2013
Read the blog post