"Peter Widdowson was one of the architects of the revolution in English Studies, and this comprehensive tribute celebrates and commemorates all that is best in the rich legacy of his work. These essays and moving personal reflections, by leading scholars and colleagues, stand as an impressive testimony to the comprehensive range, critical engagement, in political commitment and innovative interdisciplinarity, that have been the hallmarks of Widdowson's lasting contribution as editor, cultural critic, literary historian and theorist. Collectively they appraise and reinforce his sustained influence across a wide range of topics within the sphere of the dynamic interaction between Literature, History and Politics, that has exerted a major influence on the intellectual trajectory of the Humanities in recent years. Each of these fine essays stands alone as a real contribution to knowledge, but all recognise and reprise Widdowson's in and carefully poised contributions to the advancement and the transformation of English Studies over four decades." - Professsor John Drakakis, Department of English Studies, University of Stirling, UK "Unlike most anthologies celebrating the work of distinguished scholars, this volume is very much of our moment and can be recommended as an historicised state of literary studies. Its themes are war (Lucas, Martin), religion and revolution (Eagleton, Saguaro), time and history (Dentith, Randall, Stan Smith), class and inequality (Richardson, Simons). Its critical methods include critiography (Widdowson's own term), historicism (Belsey), historicised meta critical analysis (Carr), and critical realism (Dalin). In the last decades of the 20th century, the learned and ludic Peter Widdowson was in the vanguard of those who redefined "English" as a subject. His specialisms were Hardy, Theory, History, and Literature as History, making it rather than merely reflecting it. The contributors here continue his traditions of reasoned argument and debate, even arguing with Widdowson himself This is a memorable as well as a commemorative collection, including poems to Widdowson by Smith and U.A. Fanthorpe, and the final section of Personalia includes enough love and admiration for any profession." - Professor _Regenia Gagnier, Universi47 of Exeter, UK 'From the founding of the journal Literature and History (1975) through to Re-Reading English (1982), his essay [with Peter Brooker] 'A Literature for England' (1986), Hardy in History (1989) and Literature (1999), Peter Widdowson played a key role in furthering a materialist and historical criticism in Britain. The critically suggestive essays in this well-chosen collection (which includes vivid recollections by his colleagues and students) bear witness, in their different emphases, to Widdowson's distinctive achievement as a teacher, critic, scholar and editor. Given Peter Widdowson's centrality, Literature as History is essential reading for anyone wishing to trace the development of English Studies since the mid-1970s.'- William Greenslade, Professor of English, University of the West of England, UK 'As the original purpose of the collection changed because of events, the meaning of these essays becomes more complex, more layered. They are at once readings of texts and a commentary on Widdowson's contribution to English Studies, but, in the light of his death, they also become something else: a history of both a cultural formation and a political project.' -Review of English Studies 'Compiled to mark the end of Widdowson's academic career, this volume now stands as an often moving and always intellectually engaging testament to his life and work.' -Literature and History