Photo By Kare Lohse
KENNETH SPRAGUE ROTHWELL
“WWII Attu Scrapbook, 1943-1944, by Anne Rothwell”
During 1943-1944 Kenneth Rothwell, Sr. was an Army 2nd Lt. serving with the 159th Infantry’s 7th
Division on the Aleutian Islands of Attu and Amchita, AK as a second lieutenant, rifle platoon
leader.
He grew up in New York City; Shanghai, China; San Antonio, TX; and then completed high school
in Bay Shore. He attended Rutgers University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and
on the "GI Bill" earned an M.A. and Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia
University. Subsequently, as a teacher of English, he held full-time appointments at the
Universities of Rochester, Cincinnati, Kansas, and came to the University of Vermont as
department chair in 1970. He also taught summer sessions at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and
Trinity College.
Forty years ago he incorporated Shakespeare on film into his teaching, at a time when such practices were
considered faintly disreputable, especially by the older generation, a "dumbing down" of the bard, so to speak. He
did not begin his real career as a Shakespeare scholar until he was 55 years old, prior to that having been a director
of Freshman composition and author of a textbook “Questions of Rhetoric” published by Little Brown.
He co-founded and coedited with Bernice W. Kliman The Shakespeare on Film Newsletter (1976), co-chaired the
Shakespeare on Film Seminar at the Tokyo 1991 World Shakespeare Congress, and produced a three-day
Shakespeare on Film Festival at the 1996 World Congress in Los Angeles.
He edited Shakespeare on Film IV: Papers from the World Shakespeare Conference 1981), and with Annabelle
Meltzer he compiled Shakespeare on Screen: An International Filmography and Videography (1990). In 1999, the
Cambridge University Press published his A History of Shakespeare on Screen: A Century of Film and Television, a
scholarly work, which was favorably reviewed world-wide in learned journals and appeared in a 2004 second
edition.
He became a contributing editor to Shakespeare Bulletin and a member of the editorial board of Literature/Film
Quarterly. Along the way, he contributed essays in his specialty to the Encyclopedia Britannica and to the 2003
Blackwell multivolume Companion to Shakespeare Studies. In 2000 when he was 79, his plenary lecture at the
International Conference on Shakespeare Movies held at the University of Malaga, Spain, was honored by being
printed as the annual "occasional paper" by the International Shakespeare Association in Stratfordupon-Avon,
England.
He also lectured at the University of Rouen, France; and the City University of New York. His most recent public
lecture (on 12th Night) was at St. Michael's College in Jan. 2005 for which he was honored with a College medal. He
chaired the College Section of the National Council of Teachers of English, published widely in professional journals
such as Shakespeare Survey, Shakespeare Quarterly, Comparative Drama, Cineaste, and presented many papers at
national and regional meetings, two of which were published by the Modern Language Association in volumes
devoted to the teaching of King Lear and Hamlet.
As a teacher at UVM, he rejected identity politics and dogma about Shakespeare being "another dead white
European Male." Instead, he sought to inculcate in his students the same enthusiasm and fervor for literature that
he felt, though in his personal politics he remained steadfastly committed to the world-wide struggle for peace and
social justice. Despite his tendency toward "political incorrectness," he was nevertheless thought well-enough of
by his younger peers to be nominated by petition in 1999 for Presidency of the Shakespeare Association of
America, though to his vast relief being then nearly 80 years of age, he failed of election.
He received two awards for distinguished teaching at the University of Vermont, travel grants from the
International Shakespeare Association, a research grant from the American Philosophical Society, and several
University research grants.
In 1992, he was elected a Fellow of the Vermont Academy of Art and Sciences. Locally, he served on the Vestry of St.
Paul's Cathedral and briefly as Diocesan Registrar. Governor Madeleine Kunin appointed him Supervisor of Buel's
Gore and Governor Howard Dean to the Board of the Vermont Council for the Humanities.
A long time member of The Neighbors, he also formerly belonged to the Mallett's Bay boat club and Burlington
Tennis Club, where he valiantly, but ineptly, sought laurels as an athlete. He loved sailing on Lake Champlain and
playing tennis with his cronies; and visits to his New York City Pied a Terre. He especially treasured time spent with
his regular lunch groups. As a last hurrah, he published editions of The Merchant of Venice in 2008 and in 2010, King
Lear.
Kenneth Sprague Rothwell passed away on Monday, Nov. 8, 2010. For much of the past year, he had been a resident
of Burlington Rehabilitation Hospital, 300 Pearl Street in Burlington. He was predeceased by his loyal and beloved
wife of 50 years, Marilyn Gregg Rothwell.
1. The envelope in which Ken Rothwell
secured his papers and photos taken
on Attu between 1943-1944.
2. Ken's platoon; 149th Infantry, 7th
Division. Attu. Ken shown as a flag
bearer.
3. Troop formation, Attu.
4. GIs aboard abandoned Japanese
landing craft.
5. 2nd Lt. Kenneth Rothwell. Attu.
6. Little Falls Cemetery, Attu.
8. Ken Rothwell on the right.
7. Buried Quonset Hut, Attu
9. Ken Rothwell, Attu, 1943-44
PORTRAITS OF OTHER SOLDIERS WITH
WHOM KENNETH ROTHWELL SERVED
SECTION 2
SECTION 1
These photos are divided into two sections, each section can handle up to 20 photos. Click on a thumbnail photo
from the grouping on the right side to see enlarged image in the left display window. Once you have an image
present in the display window, you can hover over that image with your mouse to view magnified segment defined
by your cursor’s location.
Originally Published: 1/23/2014