Sir Andrew Jonathan Bate (born 26 June 1958) is a British academic, biographer, literary critic, broadcaster, and scholar, known for his work on Shakespeare, Romanticism, and ecocriticism. He is currently Foundation Professor of Environmental Humanities and Regents Professor of English at Arizona State University, and a Senior Research Fellow at Worcester College, Oxford, where he served as Provost from 2011 to 2019.[1]

Sir Jonathan Bate
Born (1958-06-26) 26 June 1958 (age 66)
NationalityBritish
Occupations
Known forShakespeare, Romanticism, Ecocriticism
SpousePaula Byrne
AwardsHawthornden Prize, James Tait Black Prize
Academic background
EducationSevenoaks School
Alma materSt Catharine's College, Cambridge
Harvard University
Academic work
InstitutionsTrinity Hall, Cambridge
University of Liverpool
University of Warwick
Worcester College, Oxford
Arizona State University
Main interestsShakespeare, Early Modern Britain, Romanticism, Ecocriticism, Biography

From 2017 to 2019 he was also Gresham Professor of Rhetoric at Gresham College in London. Bate was knighted in 2015 for services to literary scholarship and higher education. He has authored major biographies of the poets John Clare, Ted Hughes, and William Wordsworth, as well as influential works on Shakespeare. He has written and presented extensively for BBC radio, and wrote the one-man play Being Shakespeare for actor Simon Callow.

Bate is a Fellow of the British Academy and the Royal Society of Literature. He is married to author Paula Byrne.[2]

Academic and theatrical career

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Bate was educated at Sevenoaks School and St Catharine's College, Cambridge, completing a PhD on Shakespeare and the Romantic imagination. Early in his career he held a research fellowship at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, but struggled to secure a permanent post at Cambridge – he later said he felt “essentially exiled” after being passed over five times.[3] In 1990, he was appointed to a professorship at the University of Liverpool (as King Alfred Professor of English Literature), a move he described as “the best decision of my life.”[3] He taught at Liverpool from 1991 to 2003, then became Professor of Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature at Warwick.

In 2011, Bate was elected Provost of Worcester College, Oxford.[4] During his tenure at Worcester he led a major fundraising campaign and oversaw construction of the college’s Sultan Nazrin Shah Centre, which was shortlisted for the Stirling Prize for architecture.[5] Bate has held visiting posts at Yale University, the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Huntington Library and Folger Shakespeare Library, and served on the board of the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Council of the Arts and Humanities Research Council.[6]

In addition to academia, Bate has been active in theatre. In 2010 he wrote The Man from Stratford, a one-man play about Shakespeare commissioned for Simon Callow, which premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and toured the UK.[7] The show was later renamed Being Shakespeare and enjoyed three runs in London’s West End (2011–2012 and 2014), as well as transfers to New York (at the Brooklyn Academy of Music), Chicago, and Trieste.[8] Being Shakespeare, described by one critic as a “revelatory theatrical masterpiece,”[9] was praised for its engaging portrayal of the Bard’s life. Bate’s script mingles biographical episodes with extracts from Shakespeare’s works and historical context, while having the actor narrate Shakespeare’s story rather than impersonate him.[10] Callow’s performance earned positive reviews, and the production toured internationally. Bate has also written for the stage in other ways; for example, he served as textual consultant for the Royal Shakespeare Company and was co-curator of the British Museum’s 2012 exhibition Shakespeare: Staging the World, for which he co-wrote the catalogue.[11]

Writer

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Literary scholarship and books

Bate’s early books include Shakespeare and the English Romantic Imagination (1986) and Shakespearean Constitutions (1989), but he first gained wide acclaim with Romantic Ecology: Wordsworth and the Environmental Tradition (1991). That work helped introduce the concept of literary ecocriticism to Britain,[12] marking Bate as a pioneer in environmental literary studies. He has since been credited with “[making] Shakespeare and ecology speak to each other” in his criticism.[13]

In 1997 Bate published The Genius of Shakespeare, a wide-ranging assessment of Shakespeare’s originality and influence; the director Sir Peter Hall praised it as “the best modern book on Shakespeare.”[14] The Genius of Shakespeare has since been reissued as a classic in its field.[15] Bate’s other works of the 1990s include Shakespeare and Ovid (1993) and a novel, The Cure for Love (1998), inspired by the life of William Hazlitt.

Literary biography

Bate is also known for literary biography. His John Clare: A Biography (2003) was widely acclaimed for its thoroughness and insight into the 19th-century poet John Clare’s life and mental struggles. The book won the Hawthornden Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography, and was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize.[16] The Guardian lauded Bate’s Clare biography as “appropriately ample and properly judicious,” combining passionate advocacy with a calm refusal to mythologize Clare’s madness​theguardian.com. The Independent’s reviewer Roy Hattersley wrote that the book “is a joy to read and a necessary part of a civilised education,” offering an adventurous story of “the victory of art over adversity.”[17] Bate’s biography Soul of the Age: The Life, Mind and World of William Shakespeare (2008) took an unconventional approach by structuring Shakespeare’s life around the “Seven Ages of Man” from As You Like It. Critics noted that despite the myriad of existing Shakespeare biographies, Soul of the Age succeeded in offering a fresh perspective – The Guardian found it “surprising, fresh and anything but” a mere rehash of old material.[18] The book was a finalist for the PEN/Jacqueline Weld Award in biography. In 2019 Bate published How the Classics Made Shakespeare, examining the influence of Greek and Roman literature on Shakespeare; and in 2020 Radical Wordsworth: The Poet Who Changed the World, a biography of William Wordsworth released for the poet’s 250th birthday. Radical Wordsworth won the 2020 Lakeland Book of the Year Award for literature,[19] and was praised for its passionate scholarship – The New Statesman said the book “enchanted” even non-specialist readers with its insightful treatment of Wordsworth’s legacy.[20] In 2021, Bate published Bright Star, Green Light: The Beautiful Works and Damned Lives of John Keats and F. Scott Fitzgerald, an unusual dual-biography comparing the Romantic poet and the Jazz Age novelist. Reviews of this ambitious project were mixed: The Guardian admired Bate’s literary analysis (noting his “infectious” passion for Keats’s poetry) but found the parallel-lives conceit strained at times, calling the attempt “a little on the mad side” in its daring scope.[21]

Ted Hughes biography (2015)

Bate’s Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life (2015) garnered widespread attention for its subject and the controversies surrounding its publication. Bate had begun the Hughes project in 2010 with the approval of the poet’s estate, but in 2014 Hughes’s widow Carol withdrew cooperation, objecting that Bate was straying beyond a narrow “literary life.”[22] As a result, Bate’s contract with Faber & Faber was canceled and he completed the book without access to certain archives, publishing it as an “unauthorised” biography with HarperCollins.[23] Upon release, Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize (now the Baillie Gifford Prize) and was named Biographers International Organization’s Outstanding Arts and Literature Biography of the year.[24] Critics generally received the book positively. The Guardian’s John Mullan praised it as a “scrupulous and lucid” account of Hughes’s life, rich with scholarly research.[25] The Independent noted that Bate provides “the fullest account yet” of the tumultuous period around Sylvia Plath’s suicide and portrays Hughes in a “noble, tragic” light, though it observed that some aspects of Hughes’s later life (such as his conservative politics and environmental activities) receive relatively brief analysis.[26] However, the Hughes estate publicly condemned the biography. Carol Hughes accused Bate of containing “significant errors” and “offensive” speculation, citing 18 purported mistakes in just one section of the book.[27] HarperCollins defended the work as “impeccably researched” and noted that Bate had the cooperation of Hughes’s sister and daughter, even if the widow disapproved.[27] Bate himself stated that as a biographer his aim was to tell Hughes’s story “as truthfully and fully as possible, and not to pass judgement.”[28] Despite the disputes, the biography is regarded as a substantial contribution to Hughes studies, balancing literary analysis with the turbulent personal narrative.

Style and critical reception

Bate’s ability to bridge academic scholarship and popular readability has made him a prominent public intellectual, but it has also drawn some criticism from fellow scholars. In the early 1990s the Romanticist John Barrell faulted Bate’s critical approach as “untroubled by the ambiguities and indeterminacies”inherent in poetry.[29] Decades later, the Shakespearean scholar Rhodri Lewis similarly argued that Bate tends to “shut his eyes to the nuances”of literary works that deliberately embrace complexity.[30] Michael Dobson, director of the Shakespeare Institute, once jokingly compared Bate to “a particularly efficient undergraduate” or “a teacher’s pet,” suggesting an over-eager clarity in his interpretations.[3] Bate acknowledges that he strives to be “a writer who is also a scholar, rather than a scholar who tries to write things,” aiming to make literary analysis accessible to a broad audience.[3] Indeed, many reviewers have complimented the lucidity and narrative energy of his books, even as academic purists occasionally question his approach. Overall, Bate is credited with reinvigorating interest in his subjects—his Clare and Hughes biographies, for example, have been cited as reviving public and critical appreciation of those poets’ work—while also contributing original scholarship in fields as diverse as Shakespearean source study and environmental humanities.[31]

Textual editing

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Bate is widely recognised for his work as a scholarly editor of Shakespeare and Romantic literature. He has edited several canonical texts, combining close textual scholarship with an accessible critical style.

His edition of Titus Andronicus for the Arden Shakespeare (first published in 1995; revised in 2018) has been credited with helping to revive the play’s critical and theatrical reputation.[32] The edition was praised for its thorough engagement with sources and its sustained argument that the play’s gruesomeness should be understood within the aesthetics of early modern revenge tragedy. Reviewing the edition in Shakespeare Survey, Stanley Wells described it as “a landmark in modern Shakespeare editing,” noting Bate’s balanced attention to both textual and performative dimensions.[33]

In 2007, Bate and Eric Rasmussen served as general editors of The RSC Shakespeare: Complete Works, a major edition of the plays published by the Royal Shakespeare Company and Macmillan/Random House. It was the first collected edition since Nicholas Rowe’s in 1709 to use the First Folio as the copy text for all 36 canonical plays, including those previously edited from quarto sources.[34] This decision was described by Bate as restoring “the living theatre of Shakespeare’s own time,” although it drew criticism from some textual scholars for departing from modern editorial convention.[34] The edition won the 2007 Falstaff Award for Best Shakespearean Book of the Year.[35]

The edition was praised by some for its readability and stage-centered approach. The Times Literary Supplement called it “a handsome and intelligent edition for actors and readers alike.”[36] However, critics also noted omissions, most notably the removal of A Lover’s Complaint from the Shakespeare canon.[34] Each play was also issued in a separate volume, with Bate contributing introductions and commissioning interviews with stage directors and actors.

In 2013, Bate and Rasmussen published a companion volume, Collaborative Plays by Shakespeare and Others, which included plays often considered apocryphal or co-authored. It was the first major edition to include The Spanish Tragedy with the additional scenes often attributed to Shakespeare, arguing for their stylistic compatibility with his late style.[37] This volume also received the Falstaff Award.

A second edition of The RSC Shakespeare: Complete Works was released in 2022. It retained the First Folio base text approach but introduced new features, including marginal stage directions that reflect common performance practices, aiming to bridge the gap between scholarly and theatrical use.[38] The updated edition also revised textual commentary in light of ongoing scholarship, particularly around authorship attribution and editorial method.

Beyond Shakespeare, Bate has edited several influential anthologies. His volume The Romantics on Shakespeare (Penguin, 1992) remains a key resource for students of reception history, bringing together 18th- and 19th-century responses to Shakespeare with a substantial critical introduction. Reviewing the book in The Review of English Studies, Isabella Wheater wrote that Bate “makes a strong case for Romantic criticism as a creative engagement with Shakespeare rather than a subordinate phase in literary historiography.”[39]

His John Clare: Selected Poems (Faber, 2004) draws on his biography of the poet and presents Clare as a proto-ecological voice. The edition has been cited for renewing critical attention to Clare’s formal innovation and environmental vision.[40] Bate also edited English Romantic Poetry for the Everyman’s Library series, balancing canonical figures with lesser-known poets and emphasizing nature and politics in the Romantic canon.[41]

Broadcasting

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Bate frequently appears on radio and television. He is a regular contributor to BBC Radio 4, known for presenting literary documentaries and participating in discussions. Bate has been a panellist on Melvyn Bragg’s BBC Radio 4 programme In Our Time over a dozen times, often as the lead contributor on episodes about Shakespeare and the Romantic poets.[3] He has written and presented several radio series for BBC Radio 4, notable for their blend of scholarship and accessible storytelling. His programmes include The Elizabethan Discovery of England (exploring how Tudor-era writers and cartographers viewed the English landscape), Faking the Classics (on literary forgeries and hoaxes), and The Poetry of History (comparing poetic and historical accounts of events). In 2020, Bate presented In Wordsworth’s Footsteps, a three-part Radio 4 series marking Wordsworth’s 250th birthday in which he traveled through the poet’s Lake District haunts. The series, featuring actor Simon Russell Beale reading Wordsworth’s verses, was praised as “incredibly dense and atmospheric,” almost “storyboarded like a movie” with its rich blend of location sound and narration.[42] Reviewers noted that In Wordsworth’s Footsteps vividly evoked the landscapes of Wordsworth’s life, interweaving biography and recitation to illuminate the poetry. Bate’s engaging radio style has won admiration; The Daily Telegraph wrote that listening to his Wordsworth series “filled my heart with pleasure,” highlighting its informative yet restorative tone.[43]

On television, Bate has contributed to cultural and historical documentaries. In 2016 he appeared in the BBC series Shakespeare Live! and in Muse of Fire, discussing Shakespeare’s continuing relevance. More prominently, Bate was featured in the PBS Great Performances documentary Making Shakespeare: The First Folio (2023), produced for the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s First Folio. In this film, Bate serves as an expert guide to the significance of the 1623 First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays, which he has called “the most important secular book in the history of the Western world.”[44] In one notable segment of the documentary, Bate and former Royal Shakespeare Company director Gregory Doran meet with King Charles III (a longtime Shakespeare enthusiast) to examine a rare First Folio that once belonged to King Charles I.[45] In this on-camera conversation, Bate engages the King in discussing the Folio’s history and legacy, in effect interviewing him about the royal family’s connection to Shakespeare. The documentary also shows Bate guiding viewers through the Folio’s contents and its narrow escape from obscurity. Bate’s contributions to Making Shakespeare: The First Folio were highlighted in reviews; the Orlando Sentinel noted that he brought “erudition and enthusiasm” to the exploration of how the Folio preserved half of Shakespeare’s plays for posterity.[46] Bate has also appeared in other TV programmes, such as Simon Schama Meets… (BBC, 2022), where he discussed Shakespeare’s enduring impact. His skill at communicating complex literary history in a visually engaging manner has made him a sought-after commentator on arts documentaries.

Personal life

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Bate is married to the author and biographer Paula Byrne, whom he met during his years at Liverpool University. The couple have three children.[47] Byrne is known for biographies of Jane Austen and others, and the two have occasionally collaborated (co-editing an anthology of poetry for mental health, Stressed, Unstressed, in 2016). Bate and his family moved to Arizona in 2019 when he joined ASU, though he retains ties to the UK through his Oxford fellowship and cultural projects. In interviews, Bate has spoken of his passion for sustainability and the natural environment, interests which overlap with his literary focus on Romantic poetry and ecology.[48]

Honours

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In the 2006 Queen’s Birthday Honours Bate was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for services to higher education.[49] He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA) in 1999 and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) in 2004. In the 2015 New Year Honours, he was knighted for services to literary scholarship and education, becoming at that time the youngest person to receive a knighthood in that field.[50] The knighthood citation praised Bate as a “true Renaissance man.”

He has served as Chair of the Hawthornden Foundation (formerly Hawthornden Literary Retreat and Prize Trust) since 2022.

In April 2025, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[51]

Bibliography

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Books

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  • Shakespeare and the English Romantic imagination. Oxford University Press. 1986.
  • Shakespearean Constitutions: Politics, Theatre, Criticism 1730–1830. Oxford University Press. 1989. ISBN 0-19-811749-3.
  • Romantic Ecology: Wordsworth and the Environmental Tradition. Routledge. 1991.
  • Shakespeare and Ovid. Oxford University Press. 1993.[52]
  • Co-editor, Shakespeare: An Illustrated Stage History. Oxford University Press. 1996. ISBN 978-0-19-812372-9.
  • The Genius of Shakespeare. Picador/Oxford University Press. 1997. ISBN 978-0-19-512196-4.[53]
  • The Cure for Love. Picador. 1998.
  • The Song of the Earth. Picador/Harvard University Press. 2000. ISBN 9780674001688.
  • John Clare: A Biography. Picador/Farrar Straus and Giroux. 2003.[54]
  • Soul of the Age: The Life, Mind and World of William Shakespeare. Viking. 2008. ISBN 978-0-670-91482-1.
  • English Literature: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-956926-7.
  • Editor, The Public Value of the Humanities. Bloomsbury. 2011.
  • Shakespeare: Staging the World. British Museum London/Oxford University Press New York. 2012. ISBN 978-0-7141-2824-5. (British Museum exhibition, co-authored with Dora Thornton)
  • Co-editor, Worcester: Portrait of an Oxford College. Third Millennium. 2014.
  • Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life. William Collins London/HarperCollins New York/Fourth Estate Sydney. 2015.[55]
  • The Shepherd's Hut: Poems. Unbound. 2017. 978-1-7835-2430-3
  • How the Classics made Shakespeare. Princeton University Press. 2019. ISBN 978-0-19-956926-7.
  • Radical Wordsworth: The Poet Who Changed the World. Yale University Press. 2020. ISBN 978-0-3001-6964-5.[56]
  • Bright Star, Green Light: The Beautiful Works & Damned Lives of John Keats & F. Scott Fitzgerald. William Collins UK; Yale University Press USA. 2021. ISBN 978-0-300-25657-4
  • The Poetry of History. BBC Studios. Audiobook. 2021.
  • Mad About Shakespeare: From Classroom to Theatre to Emergency Room. William Collins. 2022. ISBN 978-0-00-816746-2.

Editions

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  • Charles Lamb: Elia and The Last Essays of Elia. Oxford University Press. 1987.
  • The Romantics on Shakespeare. Penguin Books. 1992.
  • The Arden Shakespeare: Titus Andronicus. Routledge. 1995. (Revised version, 2018)
  • John Clare: Selected Poems. Faber and Faber. 2004.
  • The RSC Shakespeare: Complete Works. Macmillan/Random House Modern Library. 2007.
  • The RSC Shakespeare: Individual Works, 34 vols. Macmillan/Random House Modern Library. 2008.
  • The RSC Shakespeare: Collaborative Plays by Shakespeare and Others. Macmillan. 2013.
  • Stressed Unstressed: Classic Poems to Ease the Mind, co-edited with Paula Byrne, Sophie Ratcliffe, Andrew Schuman. William Collins. 2016.
  • The RSC Shakespeare: Complete Works Second Edition. Bloomsbury Academic. 2022.

Articles

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Out of the Twilight, New Statesman, 130, no. 4546, (16 July 2001), pp. 25–27.

‘Othello and the Other: Turning Turk: The Subtleties of Shakespeare's Treatment of Islam’, TLS: The Times Literary Supplement, 19 October 2001, pp. 14–15.

Hazlitt, William (1778-1830), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004),

‘Was Shakespeare an Essex Man?’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 162 (2009), pp. 1–28. The 2008 British Academy Shakespeare Lecture.

‘Shakespeare in the Twilight of Romanticism: Wagner, Swinburne, Pater’, Shakespeare Jahrbuch, 146 (2010), pp. 11–25. The 2009 Shakespeares-Tag Lecture, Weimar.

‘Much throwing about of brains’, Brain: A Journal of Neurology, 132.9 (September 2009), pp. 2617–2620, https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awp205

‘Books do Furnish a Mind: the Art and Science of Bibliotherapy’, with Andrew Schuman, The Lancet, 20 Feb 2016, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)00337-8

‘“The infirmity of his age”: Shakespeare’s 400th Anniversary’, The Lancet, 23 April 2016, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)30269-0

The Anatomy of Melancholy Revisited’, The Lancet, 6 May 2017, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31152-2

‘The worst is not, so long as we can say “This is the worst”’, The Lancet, 14 April 2020, https://doi.org./10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30811-4

‘Cherchez la femme: Keats and Mrs Jones’, TLS: The Times Literary Supplement, 19 February 2021, https://www.the-tls.co.uk/issues/february-19-2021/

‘John Keats in the season of mists’, The Lancet, 22 February 2021, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)00449-9

References

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  1. ^ "Professor's expertise in Shakespeare leads to top faculty honor". ASU News. 22 February 2024.
  2. ^ Ezard, John (17 June 2006). "The laureate's biographer". The Guardian.
  3. ^ a b c d e Robson, Leo (4 June 2022). "Jonathan Bate: 'To me, Shakespeare is the great enabler'". New Statesman.
  4. ^ "Jonathan Bate elected Provost of Worcester College". University of Oxford News. 26 August 2010.
  5. ^ "Sultan Nazrin Shah Centre – Shortlisted for RIBA Stirling Prize 2018". Royal Institute of British Architects. 2018.
  6. ^ "Professor Sir Jonathan Bate FBA FRSL". The British Academy. 2021.
  7. ^ Treneman, Ann (6 August 2010). "The Man from Stratford at the Assembly Hall, Edinburgh". The Times.
  8. ^ Gardner, Lyn (27 June 2011). "Being Shakespeare – review". The Guardian.
  9. ^ "Being Shakespeare at the Harold Pinter Theatre". WestEndTheatre.com. 8 May 2014.
  10. ^ Dickson, Andrew (29 February 2012). "Bard labour: Patrick Stewart and Simon Callow tackle Shakespeare the man". The Guardian.
  11. ^ Bate, Jonathan; Dora Thornton (2012). Shakespeare: Staging the World. British Museum Press. ISBN 9780714128245.
  12. ^ Gifford, Terry (1998). "Pastoral, Anti-Pastoral and Post-Pastoral as Reading Strategies". Critical Survey. 10 (3): 1–8. doi:10.3167/001115798783233468.
  13. ^ Richardson, Brian (2018). Ecocritical Shakespeare. Liverpool University Press. p. 32.
  14. ^ Hall, Peter (2003). Shakespeare Revealed. Simon & Schuster. p. xi.
  15. ^ "Picador to reissue The Genius of Shakespeare". The Bookseller. 18 December 2015.
  16. ^ Fleming, Rupert (16 August 2004). "Jonathan Bate wins James Tait Black Prize". The Daily Telegraph.
  17. ^ Hattersley, Roy (11 October 2003). "John Clare: A Biography, By Jonathan Bate". The Independent.
  18. ^ Billington, Michael (15 November 2008). "The seven ages of Shakespeare". The Guardian.
  19. ^ "2020 Awards". Lakeland Book of the Year. 2020.
  20. ^ Cooke, Rachel (5 May 2021). "How Keats lives on – and other new books reviewed". New Statesman.
  21. ^ Cooke, Rachel (24 January 2021). "Bright Star, Green Light by Jonathan Bate review – the parallel lives of a pair of romantics". The Guardian.
  22. ^ Bate, Jonathan (2 April 2014). "How the actions of the Ted Hughes estate will change my biography". The Guardian.
  23. ^ Flood, Alison (19 October 2015). "Ted Hughes biography: publisher calls estate's attack 'defamatory'". The Guardian.
  24. ^ "Biographers International Organization 2016 Award Winners". BIO. 15 May 2016.
  25. ^ Mullan, John (9 October 2015). "Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life by Jonathan Bate – review". The Guardian.
  26. ^ Gibbs, Jonathan (1 October 2015). "Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life, book review". The Independent.
  27. ^ a b Flood, Alison (19 October 2015). "Ted Hughes biography: publisher calls estate's attack 'defamatory'". The Guardian.
  28. ^ Kidd, James (3 October 2015). "Sir Jonathan Bate on his controversial new biography of Ted Hughes: 'This was the book I was born to write'". The Independent.
  29. ^ Barrell, John (1989). "Review: Shakespeare and the English Romantic Imagination". The Review of English Studies. 40 (159): 432–434.
  30. ^ Lewis, Rhodri (5 July 2019). "Review: How the Classics Made Shakespeare". The Times Literary Supplement (6039): 6.
  31. ^ Goodbody, Axel (2018). "The Rising Tide of Climate Change Fiction". Environmental Humanities. 10 (2): 501.
  32. ^ Bevington, David (Spring 1996). "Review of Titus Andronicus, ed. Jonathan Bate". Shakespeare Quarterly. 47 (1): 95–99. doi:10.2307/2871393.
  33. ^ Wells, Stanley (1997). "Review of Jonathan Bate's Titus Andronicus". Shakespeare Survey. 50: 244–246.
  34. ^ a b c Rosenbaum, Ron (12 June 2008). "Are Those Shakespeare's "Balls"?". Slate. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  35. ^ "2007 Falstaff Awards". Shakespeareances. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  36. ^ de Grazia, Margreta (7 December 2007). "Review: The RSC Shakespeare". TLS.
  37. ^ Jackson, MacDonald P. (2014). "Review: Collaborative Plays by Shakespeare and Others". Shakespeare Quarterly. 65 (2): 225–227.
  38. ^ "The RSC Complete Works Second Edition". Bloomsbury Academic. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  39. ^ Wheater, Isabella (1999). "Review of The Romantics on Shakespeare, ed. Jonathan Bate". The Review of English Studies. 50 (197): 84–87. doi:10.1093/res/50.197.84.
  40. ^ Thomas, Adrian (2005). "Review of John Clare: Selected Poems, ed. Jonathan Bate". The John Clare Society Journal. 24: 95–97.
  41. ^ "English Romantic Poetry". Penguin Random House. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  42. ^ Quirke, Antonia (12 February 2020). "Following Wordsworth's footsteps – Radio review". New Statesman.
  43. ^ Orr, James (13 February 2020). "Radio 4's walk with Wordsworth filled my heart with pleasure". The Daily Telegraph.
  44. ^ Ryzik, Melena (30 March 2023). "Shakespeare's First Folio at 400: A Wonder of the Literary World". The New York Times.
  45. ^ "King Charles III Examines the First Folio of King Charles I (PBS clip)". PBS. 17 November 2023.
  46. ^ Persall, Steve (17 November 2023). "An engrossing look at the book that made Shakespeare". Orlando Sentinel.
  47. ^ Furness, Hannah (8 June 2019). "Sir Jonathan Bate: I turned down Oxford University over wife's treatment". The Telegraph.
  48. ^ "Sir Jonathan Bate joins ASU as Professor of Environmental Humanities". Arizona State University. 2019.
  49. ^ "United Kingdom list: CBE". The London Gazette. 17 June 2006.
  50. ^ "New Year Honours 2015: CSV". UK Cabinet Office. 31 December 2014.
  51. ^ "Announcing the 2025 Guggenheim Fellows". 15 April 2025.
  52. ^ Wheater, Isabella (February 1999). "Reviewed Work: Shakespeare and Ovid by Jonathan Bate". The Review of English Studies. 50 (197): 84–87. doi:10.1093/res/50.197.84. JSTOR 517771.
  53. ^ Berek, P. (2000). "Review of 'The Genius of Shakespeare' by Jonathan Bate". Shakespeare Quarterly. 51 (1): 112–114. doi:10.2307/2902334. JSTOR 2902334.
  54. ^ Motion, Andrew (17 October 2003). "Review of John Clare by Jonathan Clare". The Guardian. (See John Clare.)
  55. ^ Maxwell, Glyn (21 December 2015). "Review of Ted Hughes: The Unauthorised Life by Jonathan Bate". The New York Times.
  56. ^ Cooke, Rachel (14 April 2020). "Review of Radical Wordsworth by Jonathan Bate". The Guardian.
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Academic offices
Preceded by Provost of Worcester College, Oxford
2011–2019
Succeeded by
Kate Tunstall (interim)