In addition to our existing funding schemes, BARS has launched a new initiative in 2024: the Open Fellowship, which is available to scholars at any career stage undertaking exceptional work… Read more »
In June 2020, the British Association for Romantic Studies announced its unequivocal support of the Black community, its condemnation of all forms of racism and its commitment to practical action. In… Read more »
My PhD examines respiratory embodiment in Romantic theatre, particularly that of S.T Coleridge. I was extremely grateful to use a BARS travel scholarship in October to visit the National Library… Read more »
Closing date 8th December 5pm. Applications are invited for two 36-month postdoctoral positions at University College Dublin working on the exciting interdisciplinary Wellcome Trust funded project “Drinking Cultures: The Cultural… Read more »
The British Association for Romantic Studies is glad to launch the Call for Papers for its 2024 International Conference, Romantic Making and Unmaking. The text can be found below and… Read more »
We would like to invite Early Career Researchers who are not in permanent employment to apply for a one-month residential Fellowship with the Wordsworth Trust at Grasmere. Two Fellowships are… Read more »
Written by Adele Douglas, a PhD student in History at Manchester Metropolitan University. Adele’s project is on PETERLOO IN MANCHESTER; MEMORY, LEGACY, AND LOCAL IDENTITY 1819-2019 ‘Between Text and Image’,… Read more »
John Keats in 2024: Prospects and Retrospections Presented by Keats Foundation, and hosted at Keats House Hampstead A Three-Day Keats Foundation Conference at Keats House, Hampstead, London Friday 17 May… Read more »
Join Kavita Mudan Finn, Katie Garner, Jonathan Hsy, Bryant White and Vanessa Iacocca on 30th November 2023 for a fascinating roundtable on rethinking nineteenth-century medievalisms. This roundtable event uncovers new… Read more »
Monday 19 February 2024 | Welsh School of Architecture |Cardiff University Keynote Speaker: Dr Timothy Brittain-Catlin, University of Cambridge The past often informs the present in many, interconnected ways. For… Read more »