Sheffield Hallam University, June 12-14th 2023 This annually-held conference addresses the role of women in consumerism, shopping, global trade, domestic trade, markets (literary and otherwise), currency, and varying practices of… Read more »
In conjunction with the ‘Nineteenth-Century Narratives of Horror’, the North West Long Nineteenth Century Research Network organised a Meet the Editors session with key editorial members of the Gothic Studies… Read more »
On 2 November, the North West Long Nineteenth Century Research Network hosted a special seasonal event: ‘Nineteenth-Century Narratives of Horror’. Three speakers explored diverse ways of thinking about horror in… Read more »
Cambridge, UK, 13 – 14 January 2023https://www.rrrjournal.com @RRRJournal Since increased critical attention paid to ‘affect’ in the 1990s, studies of the experience of feeling have grown exponentially across a range… Read more »
Organised by the AHRC-funded ‘Books and Borrowing, 1750-1830′ and ‘Libraries, Reading Communities and Cultural Formation in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic’ projects. Split-Venue Research Festival 13-14 April 2023 – University of Liverpool… Read more »
Lancaster University – 26-27 July 2023 What role do notebooks play in the shaping of literary and scientific history? How and why should difficult-to-decipher manuscripts be interpreted, particularly when their contents… Read more »
Manchester University is hosting 2 events for this seminar series. Join on campus or online, Wednesday 2nd November, for a special Halloween hybrid edition of the North West Long Nineteenth-Century… Read more »
The 1822 eruption of Vesuvius fed into contemporary discussions and imaginings on the themes of disaster, change, and the power and beauty of the natural world. It was also a focus for… Read more »
Leuven, 26-27 June 2023 As one of the oldest and most widely practised forms of reflection on vernacular literatures, Shakespeare criticism has helped shape modern literary scholarship worldwide. The mutual… Read more »
4-5 November 2022, King’s College London Over the last three years, the Radical Translations Project, funded by the AHRC, has worked to uncover the mobility of revolutionary language – tracking not only… Read more »