Harold Bloom's "The Western Canon"

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Literary critic Harold Bloom’s controversial list of the books that shaped Western culture, from his The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages.

I have tried to list inexpensive English-language editions whenever possible. Occasionally the edition or translator will not precisely match that specified by Bloom; this seems unavoidable.

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  1. 1.
    The Epic of Gilgamesh (Penguin Classics)
    by Anonymous

  2. 2.
    The Egyptian Book of the Dead: The Book of Going Forth by Day
    by Raymond Faulkner

  3. 3.
    Text Bible-KJV-1611

  4. 4.
    The Apocrypha

  5. 6.
    The Iliad (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)
    by Homer

  6. 7.
    The Odyssey
    by Robert Fagles

  7. 8.
    Hesiod : Theogony, Works and Days, Shield
    by Hesiod

  8. 10.
    The Odes (Penguin Classics)
    by Pindar

  9. 12.

  10. 13.
    Prometheus Bound (Greek Tragedy in New Translations)
    by Aeschylus

  11. 14.
    Persians (Greek Tragedy in New Translations)
    by Aeschylus

  12. 15.
    ?
    The Suppliant women
    by Aeschylus

  13. 24.
    The Knights of Aristophanes
    by Aristophanes

  14. 27.
    Herodotus The Histories
    by Herodotus

  15. 28.
    The History of the Peloponnesian War
    by Thucydides

  16. 30.
    Poetics (Penguin Classics)
    by Aristotle

  17. 38.
    The Complete Fables (Penguin Classics)
    by Aesop

  18. 39.
    Selected Satires of Lucian (The Norton Library)
    by Lucian of Samosata

  19. 41.
    Amphitryon & Two Other Plays (Norton Library)
    by Titus Maccius Plautus

  20. 42.
    The Comedies (Penguin Classics)
    by Terence

  21. 44.
    The Nature of the Gods (Penguin Classics)
    by Marcus Tullius Cicero

  22. 48.
    Catullus, Tibullus, Pervigilium Veneris (Loeb Classical Library No. 6)
    by Gaius Valerius Catullus

  23. 49.
    The Aeneid (Penguin Classics)
    by Virgil

  24. 50.

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Created by c. libre on Apr 10, 2006.
 

Comments

bah

Duplicate — 5 years ago

How German It Is/Wie Deutsch ist Es was on twice, so I deleted the duplicate.


From a formal list — 5 years ago

sipes23 -

This list is from Harold Bloom’s book “The Western Canon”. In the book, he elaborates on the reasoning behind many of his choices, which he acknowledges often deviate from what is typically considered a “canon”. Most especially, the section from which most of the modern books are drawn is called “The Chaotic Age: A Canonical Prophecy” – maybe that makes a little more sense out of the number of relatively contemporary picks?

Anyway, more information is available here:

http://www.literarycritic.com/bloom.htm


Long and slanted list — 5 years ago

Ok, I think I’m pretty well read. And given that I studied Latin (and teach it now) in high-school and college, I thought I’d have read more of the list. Yeah, I’d pick up a few more if I counted “part” or “one story from the collection” as counting.

Ok, so the list is long, and I hadn’t truthfully expected to cross off more than say, 50-100. I was expecting plenty of odd and obscure stuff.

Instead I got the bulk of the list in 20th Century Prose and Poetry. And nearly the balance in 19th Century Prose and Poetry. How can this list be a “Canon” if it skims 25 centuries of writing and focuses on 2? I was hoping to uncover hundreds of goodies from the 14th-17th Century.

Wrong. Instead, it’s recent stuff that, while it may be quality, hasn’t been around long enough to qualify as “canon.”

This list would better be titled, “Famous Books of Western Literature.”


This is a loooong list! — 5 years ago

I got through Page 26 #1300. I still need to finish the last 6 pages.

Thanks for taking the time to enter this in!




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