All rights reserved, View Jane’s author page on Bloodaxe Books website. Griffiths taught at Oxford University's St. Edmund Hall, before becoming a lecturer in English literature at the University of Edinburgh. Silent in Finisterre shows her extending her explorations of people and place with delight at being in the world, despite the threat of loss. Dr Jane Griffiths
[email protected]. Jane Griffiths was born in Exeter in 1970, and brought up in Holland and Devon. As we celebrate all things OED for the first edition’s 90 th anniversary, Jane Griffiths, University of Oxford academic, poet, and former lexicographer, has joined our celebrations to offer an insight into her poem ‘nature, n.¹’, inspired in part by her time as an editor for the OED. We use cookies on our website. She maintains her interest in bookbinding, but now spends more time working as a silver smith and tending a slightly erratic MGB. Sir Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney . Matriculating in 1988, she was an undergraduate and graduate at Magdalen, and taught for four years as a lecturer at St Edmund Hall. She was appointed a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Bristol in 2007. Imraan Coovadia . Lively and attractive tunes suitable for players of Grades 3-7 standard ; A range of tune types, including 3/2 hornpipes, jigs, reels, strathspeys, and morris dance tunes [7], For other people named Jane Griffiths, see, "Emerging artists on shortlist for most valuable poetry prize", http://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/terrestrial-variations-1022, http://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/silent-in-finisterre-1146, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jane_Griffiths_(poet)&oldid=968994943, Articles with dead external links from April 2017, Articles with permanently dead external links, Wikipedia articles with SUDOC identifiers, Wikipedia articles with WorldCat identifiers, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 22 July 2020, at 19:21. Jane Griffiths (born 1970) is a British poet and literary historian. Jane Patricia Griffiths (born 17 April 1954) is a British linguist and politician. Her poetry gained her an Eric Gregory Award in 1996. It was described by Sarah Broom in the Times Literary Supplement as 'a major achievement, outstanding, complex and subtle in thought, supple of tone and piercing in its observation.' [3] According to her university page, Griffiths works primarily on the poetry and drama of the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Jane Griffiths, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester, Jean McFarlane Building, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK. Email: jane. All rights reserved, , University of Oxford. Elizabeth Bishop's House in the Mind: Memory, Imagination, and Interior Space in "The End of March", Have This in Mind: Word and Image in Audelay's Writing, Associate Professor; Tutorial Fellow, Wadham College. Jane Griffiths joined Wadham as Fellow in English in September 2012. She studied English at Oxford University, where she won the Newdigate prize for her poem "The House". [email protected] ac. Jane Griffiths . Jane works primarily on English poetry and drama of the 15th and 16th centuries. Griffiths was born in Exeter, England, and brought up in the Netherlands. Tales of Literacy for the 21st Century. Glosses, notes written in the margins of manuscripts and early printed books, can not only be integral to the text, they can be amusing or playful distractions from it says Wadham Fellow Jane Griffths in a new book. Abstract Full Text Abstract. Traditional Fiddle + CD. After reading English at Oxford, where her poem 'The House' won the Newdigate Prize, she worked as a book-binder in London and Norfolk.