Walter Scott, by Charles Picart, published by T. Cadell & W. Davies, after William Evans, after Sir Henry Raeburn; stipple engraving, published 21 December 1811; NPG D16117; used under a… Read more »
Ted Underwood is a Professor and the LAS Centennial Scholar of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His graduate work was in the field of Romanticism and led,… Read more »
Siobhan Carroll is an Assistant Professor at the University of Delaware, specialising in British literature from 1750 to 1850 and in modern fantasy and science fiction. In the past couple… Read more »
Judith Thompson is Professor of English at Dalhousie University and is, in her own words a ‘Romanticist by profession and predilection’. Over the course of her career she has written… Read more »
Richard De Ritter is a Lecturer in the Long Eighteenth Century at the University of Leeds. He has a particular interest in women’s writing, having published articles on Maria Edgeworth… Read more »
David Higgins is an Associate Professor in English Literature at the University of Leeds; he currently serves on the BARS Executive and was until recently the Editor of the BARS… Read more »
Rebecca Davies is currently a Teaching Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. She completed her doctorate at Aberystwyth University in 2011, where she also held lectureships in eighteenth and nineteenth-century… Read more »
Carol Baraniuk is currently a full-time Research Associate on the Ulster-Scots Education Project at the University of Ulster, where she has also lectured on the Ulster-Scots literary tradition. She completed her… Read more »
Kate Horgan currently works as a Hansard editor at the Parliament of Australia in Canberra. In 2012, she completed her PhD at the Australian National University, submitting a thesis on… Read more »
Simon J. White is currently a Reader in Romantic and Nineteenth-Century Literature at Oxford Brookes University. He has published numerous articles and book chapters on working-class and labouring-class writers in… Read more »