The Pforzheimer Grants are awarded each year to support research in Romantic-era literature and culture. The awards honor Carl H. Pforzheimer, Jr. (1907-1996), past president, vigorous advocate, and most generous benefactor… Read more »
Monday 12 September, 5pm – Online “The writer of romance is to be considered as the writer of real history” (William Godwin) From the eighteenth century onwards, the genres of… Read more »
The Wordsworths and Gardening 25 August, 7.30pm, Online Dr Jeremy Davies and Dr Jane Roberts join Principal Curator Jeff Cowton to discuss their work, including a project to return the… Read more »
The second workshop of the “Victorian Literary Languages” research network, co-organised by Gregory Tate (St Andrews) and Karin Koehler (Bangor), will be taking place in Trinity College Dublin on Thursday… Read more »
Refusals, Redactions and Divestments Anti-Racist Pedagogies Teach-in 1 September 2022 10am -3pm EST Join here by Zoom The Woman of Colour Facebook Group, UTSA English, the K-SAA and Colby College In… Read more »
16-17 SEPTEMBER 2022 The Liberal was a short-lived and ill-fated journal, edited by Leigh Hunt in Pisa and published by his brother John in London. It is often viewed as… Read more »
Sacramento, California March 30 – April 1, 2023 Proposal Deadline: September 30, 2022 Nineteenth-Century Studies Association Sacramento, host city for NCSA’s 2023 conference, lends itself to exploring issues of… Read more »
Editors: James Rovira and Julian Knox The editors welcome chapter proposals for the forthcoming anthology Romanticism and Heavy Metal. Like the collections Rock and Romanticism: Blake, Wordsworth, and Rock from Dylan to… Read more »
This roundtable, Poetic Form and Biological Form, addressed the explosion of experimental ideas about form in literature and the natural sciences in the Romantic period, seeking to generate insight and… Read more »
Online, interdisciplinary conference 12th and 13th September 2022 The long-eighteenth century was a time of continual transformation. In the two hundred years between 1650 and 1850, rapid urbanisation turned small… Read more »