Leslie Peter Johnson (3 July 1930 – 16 December 2016),[1] also known as Peter Johnson, L. Peter Johnson, or L. P. Johnson, was a British Germanist, who specialized in the literature of the Middle High German "golden age". He was Reader in Medieval German Literature at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Pembroke College.
After a brief period as a Lektor in Frankfurt,[5] Peter Johnson returned from Germany to take up a lectureship at Cardiff University, before moving to Cambridge in 1959 for an Assistant Lectureship in the Department of German in the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages. Becoming a member of Pembroke College in the same year, he was elected to the college's fellowship in 1961. In 1963 he was promoted to Lecturer and in 1994 to Reader, a post which he held until his retirement in 1997, when he was granted the title of Emeritus Reader. In the faculty he held the post of Head of Department of Other Languages for ten years.[3]
In the wider world of German Studies, he played a central role in the Conference of University Teachers of German in Britain and Ireland,[6] and was for many years the co-chair of the Wolfram von Eschenbach Gesellschaft, the leading association for medieval German scholarship.[5] His interest in and support for younger linguists was reflected in school visits and A-level examining.[7]
Johnson, Leslie Peter (1979). "Morungen, Walther und die Kunst der lyrischen Allegorie". In Honemann, Volker; Ruh, Kurt; Schnell, Bernhard; Wegstein, Werner (eds.). Poesie und Gebrauchsliteratur im deutschen Mittelalter: Würzburger Colloquium 1978. Tübingen: Niemeyer. pp. 181–204. ISBN978-3484103719.
Johnson, L P (1982). "Down with "hohe Minne"". Oxford German Studies. 13 (1): 36–48. doi:10.1179/ogs.1982.13.1.36.
Johnson, L P (1982). "Wanderers Nachtlied". In Paulin, Roger (ed.). Lectures on "The spectrum of Goethe's poetry" by members of the Cambridge Department of German. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 35–48.
Johnson, L P (1982). "Wolfram von Eschenbach". In Ford, Boris (ed.). The New Pelican Guide to English Literature. Vol. 1/2 (3rd ed.). pp. 188–206. ISBN978-0140222647.
Johnson, L. Peter (1993). "Die Blütezeit und der neue Status der Literatur". In Heinzle, Joachim (ed.). Literarische Interessenbilding im Mittelalter. Germanistische Symposien Berichtsbände, XIV. Stuttgart: Metzler. pp. 235–265. doi:10.1007/978-3-476-05559-0. ISBN978-3-476-00879-4.
Johnson, L. Peter (1999). Die höfische Literatur der Blütezeit: (1160/70-1220/30). Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den Anfängen bis zum Beginn der Neuzeit. Vol. II/1. de Gruyter. ISBN978-3484107038.
Festschriften
Ridley, Hugh; McPherson, Karin, eds. (1997). Feste Freundschaft. Short Essays in Honour of Peter Johnson. Dublin: University College Dublin. ISBN1-898473-74-9.
Heinzle, Joachim; Young, Christopher; Chinca, Mark, eds. (2000). Blütezeit: Festschrift Für L. Peter Johnson Zum 70. Geburtstag. Tübingen: Niemeyer. ISBN978-3484640184.
^Sagarra 1973, p. 87. "The opening chapter by L. P. Johnson on the German language impresses immediately by its admirably detailed explanation of terms, which is particularly important in this field. His references to ancient history, archaeology and anthropology as aids to the investigation of the origins of language are most stimulating..."
Flood, John L., ed. (1988). Handbook of Germanists in Great Britain and Ireland. Bonn: DAAD. pp. 39–40.
Mallinson, Jonathan (2017). "Eulogy at the funeral of Peter Johnson". Pembroke Gazette.
McPherson, Karin (1997). "Coincidences". In Ridley, Hugh; McPherson, Karin (eds.). Feste Freundschaft. Short Essays in Honour of Peter Johnson. Dublin: University College Dublin. p. 122. ISBN1-898473-74-9.