Sandy Cunningham was born in Sunderland on 16 October 1928 and studied English at Durham University, followed by a BLitt at the University of Oxford. He taught at the University of Manchester (1954-58) and then became a lecturer at Durham (1958-63).
It was at this point that Professor Cunningham joined the new English department at the University of York as a founding member (1963-75). Appointed senior lecturer, he was later promoted to reader before becoming professor of English at the University of Leicester for the rest of his career, retiring and becoming emeritus in 1989. He served both as head of department and on the board of Leicester University Press.
Largely a specialist in the great writers of the 18th聽century, Professor Cunningham wrote聽Pope鈥檚 Rape of the Lock: Studies in English Literature聽(1961) and聽Samuel Johnson: The Vanity of Human Wishes; And, Rasselas聽(1982), and delivered the Warton Lecture on English Poetry at the British Academy (1979), although he also revealed a deep understanding of Elizabethan literature in his edition of Christopher Marlowe鈥檚 Tamburlaine the Great (1981).
In parallel with this, he was a significant poet right up to the end of his life and published three separate collections: Powers That be (1969), Tidings (2008) and Soundings (2014).
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Joanne Shattock, emeritus professor of English at Leicester, remembered Professor Cunningham as 鈥渁 charismatic and idiosyncratic lecturer鈥 who 鈥渄elighted undergraduate and wider audiences alike by his unstuffy style and his capacity to surprise as well as at times to baffle by his approach to a seemingly straightforward topic鈥.
She added: 鈥The title of his inaugural lecture, 鈥極f Giants and Eggshells鈥, signalled what was to follow.聽His last lecture, on Swift鈥檚 Gulliver鈥檚 Travels, was mischievously delivered from behind a table on which he had placed a china horse looking into a mirror.鈥
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He was also, Professor Shattock continued, 鈥渁 kind and inspiring man [who] would devote many hours to reading his colleagues鈥 work before publication, offering acute and helpful commentary鈥.
Yet despite 鈥渁 brilliant and instructive mind鈥, she said, he was 鈥渃ompletely without 鈥榮ide鈥: amusing and relaxed with his younger colleagues, one of whom recalls watching 鈥楤otham鈥檚 Ashes鈥 with him during lunchtime in the senior common room. When the match reached a crucial point at which both should have returned to their offices, Professor Cunningham thought nothing of designating this a historical moment which should not be missed, and both stayed on during the afternoon to witness the victory.鈥
Professor Cunningham died of pneumonia on 13 September and is survived by his wife, Eithne, one daughter, three sons and聽three grandchildren.
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