NEW YORK • Harold Bloom, the prodigious literary critic who championed and defended the Western canon in an outpouring of influential books that appeared not only on college syllabuses but also – unusual for an academic – on bestseller lists, died on Monday at a hospital in New Haven, Connecticut. He was 89.
His death was confirmed by his wife, Mrs Jeanne Bloom, who said he taught his last class at Yale University last Thursday.
Bloom was frequently called the most notorious literary critic in the United States. From a vaunted perch at Yale, he flew in the face of almost every trend in the literary criticism of his day.
Chiefly, he argued for the literary superiority of the Western giants like William Shakespeare, Geoffrey Chaucer and Franz Kafka – all of them white and male, his own critics pointed out – over writers favoured by what he called "the School of Resentment", by which he meant multi-culturalists, feminists, Marxists, neo-conservatives and others whom he saw as often betraying literature's essential purpose.
"He is, by any reckoning, one of the most stimulating literary presences of the last half-century – and the most protean," Mr Sam Tanenhaus wrote in 2011 in The New York Times Book Review, of which he was the editor at the time; "a singular breed of scholar-teacher-critic-prose-poet-pamphleteer".
At the heart of Bloom's writing was a passionate love of literature and a relish for its heroic figures.
"Shakespeare is God," he declared, and Shakespeare's characters, he said, are as real as people and have shaped Western perceptions of what it is to be human – a view he propounded in the acclaimed Shakespeare: The Invention Of The Human (1998).
Bloom was widely regarded as the most popular literary critic in America. Among his other bestsellers were his magnum opus, The Western Canon: The Books And School Of The Ages, published in 1994, and How Read More – Source