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  1. 11 mag 2024 · Edwin Muir (born May 15, 1887, Deerness, Orkney, Scot.—died Jan. 3, 1959, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Eng.) was a literary critic, translator, and one of the chief Scottish poets of his day writing in English. The son of a crofter, Muir received his education in Kirkwall.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 28 mag 2024 · The Orcadian poet, novelist, critic, and translator Edwin Muir (1887-1959) is one of modern Scotland’s most important writers. His work evokes a timeless realm of dream and fable yet, at the same time, confronts the major catastrophes of the twentieth-century.

  3. 31 mag 2024 · Between 1930 and 1949 Willa and Edwin Muir would bring the fiction of Franz Kafka to English readers for the first time and their translations would become the canonical English language editions for decades and remain in print today.

  4. 28 mag 2024 · The Edwin Muir Papers (Coll-445) includes manuscripts and other working materials for literary and critical works and important correspondence with leading Scottish writers.

  5. 28 mag 2024 · This page lists literary manuscripts by Edwin Muir held by Edinburgh University Library. They include individual poems, working materials for prose works, and notes for lectures.

  6. 25 mag 2024 · Edwin Muir, “Merlin,” cited in David Mackay, A Flock of Words: An Anthology of Poetry for Children and Others (The Bodley Head: London, 1979), 188.

  7. 29 mag 2024 · This October we celebrate the twentieth anniversary of Edinburgh becoming the worlds first UNESCO City of Literature, the founding city in what is now an international network of 53 Cities of Literature in 39 countries around the world. Looking back, we can hardly believe it’s been two decades.