Call for Papers: The North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR) Conference 2025

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The North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR) is pleased to announce the theme of–and call for contributions to–our 2025 conference, which will be held online, accessibly, and hosted by Athabasca University, on August 14-16, 2025.

Romanticism’s Commons names a field for which we hope to solicit contributions to current studies in Romanticism from a transdisciplinary array of scholarly approaches and perspectives. This theme also resonates with and builds on those of previous NASSR conferences, like those focusing on mediations, openness, and technology, among others.

In everyday speech, “common” connotes something of sharing, and something of averageness; in the everyday speech of the long 19th century, the word also familiarly confers pejorative judgment on sharing or averageness deemed crude, inappropriate, promiscuous, and/or conspicuously gender-coded (as in patriarchy’s figure of a “common woman”). In legal discourse, the commons names territory or space that is publicly shared and accessed, de-propertized, or otherwise not privately enclosed. During the Romantic period, common lands continued to be enclosed or privatized by the ever-encroaching and -expanding private interests of industrial capital. Analogously, scholars and critics of intellectual property (IP) in the digital age argue that a new wave of enclosures now proceeds by way of increasingly strict and punitive copyright and other IP laws; these new enclosures threaten other kinds of cultural and archival commons, like the “public domain”–the cultural commons comprised of works whose copyrights have expired, forming a shared heritage and repertoire for new cultural production.

“Common” also means a myriad things for other discourses, etymologically, historically, and interculturally. NASSR invites scholars of Romantic-period literature and culture to consider our theme’s keywords in relation to your own researches, and to come together for a conversation about Romanticism’s commons, however theorized or reimagined.

Understood in the broadest terms possible, research on “Romanticism’s commons” can encompass topics like (but not limited to) the following:

·         Romanticism’s digital commons(es)

·         speaking in common tongues

·         “commonties” (Hogg): etymologies, dicourses, genealogies

·         gendering, classing, and/or sexing what’s “common”

·         common Romanticism in pop culture

·         law, property, intellectual property: from enclosures to new enclosures

·         Romantic literature(s) and public domain(s)

·         common grounds: discourses and praxis of solidarity discourses

·         common knowledge(s), (un)common sense

Conference organizers are open to various forms of proposal:

Traditional proposals for 15-20-minute papers (250-word abstracts) submitted by individual NASSR members to the conference organizers.

Proposals for complete panels, special sessions, caucus sessions (with the roster of committed speakers and affiliations) for three 20-minute or four 15-minute papers (250-word abstracts for each paper accompanied by a cover letter describing the aims of the panel as a whole). All papers are subject to vetting by the organizing committee.

If you are interested in proposing a panel but are looking for participants, we encourage you to advertise your topic by sending an email to NASSR2025@proton.me or nassr.news@gmail.com.

Proposals for roundtables: please provide a description of the roundtable topic, including a title, with a list of committed panelists (with affiliations). Please note that the maximum number of roundtable members, including the chair, is six (6).

The deadline for all submissions (paper proposals, complete panels/special sessions/caucus sessions, and roundtables) is February 14, 2025.

Please send all submissions, together with a one-page CV — and/or direct questions — to the NASSR 2025 conference committee, chaired by Mark A. McCutcheon, at NASSR2025@proton.me

All submissions must include your name, academic affiliation, and preferred email address.

For further details ie keynotes, see the conference website https://landing.athabascau.ca/pages/revision/25302637

Publication Announcement: BARS Review (No 60 2023-24)

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We are pleased to announce that the most recent double issue of the Review is now available.

https://www.bars.ac.uk/review/index.php/barsreview/issue/view/19 –

This issue comprises 14 reviews in total and a spotlight section on ‘Romanticism Abroad’.

This is my valedictory issue of the Review, having edited the publication over the last seven years from 2017-2024.  I have very much enjoyed my years as editor of the Review, I wanted to thank all of those that have reviewed for us over those years (and I hope will continue to review for BARS), as well as all those people that have helped to make each issue of the review possible. In particular, I would like to thank Sharon tai, Yimon Lo, Katie Harling-Lee, and Lydia Shaw. Thanks, too, to Matt Sangster and his expert guidance on all technical aspects of the production process.

As I step out of the role, I am delighted to welcome Dr Caroline Ritchie as the new editor of the Review and wish the publication every future success!

Best wishes,

Mark Sandy 

Call for Proposals: BARS Digital Events 2025

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The British Association for Romantic Studies is delighted to invite proposals for digital roundtables in 2025! These 90-minute events bring together four or five speakers, presenting for ca.10-minutes each, followed by a Q&A. At least one of your panelists should be an ECR or PhD student. 

Topics might include but are not limited to:

  • Author studies
  • Developing, transforming and challenging the canon
  • Interdisciplinarity, museum and heritage collaborations
  • Romanticism and … (gender, disability, race, postcoloniality, ecocriticism, etc.)
  • Special issues and new academic editions

These events are free to access, and a wonderful way to test out new research! We strongly encourage ECRs and PhD students to apply. For inspiration, why not check out our YouTube channel?

Please send a 250-word abstract, suggested title(s) and a list of (potential) participants in your panel by March 15th 2025 to bars.digitalevents@gmail.com.

Friendly Reminder: BARS Membership Renewal

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Dear BARS Members,

I hope you are all well. As we approach the end of the year, I would like to express our gratitude for your continued support of BARS. 

As Membership Secretary, I am reaching out to remind you to renew your membership by 1 January 2025. BARS memberships run from 1 January to 31 December each year. The annual subscription costs £25 (waged) or £10 (unwaged and/or postgraduate). BARS is expecting to need to increase membership fees in the next year to support our expanding activities and initiatives – more information on this will be circulated ahead of any change being implemented. Please note: Please disregard this reminder if you are a lifetime honorary member or have already renewed your membership.

Current members renewing their subscriptions can use any of the payment methods listed on the ‘How to Join’ page on the BARS website. We would appreciate it if you could take a moment to ensure that your subscription category and email address are up to date. 

By renewing your membership, you will continue your subscription to and ability to share notices to the BARS Electronic Mailbase. You will be eligible for BARS funding in the form of grants and bursaries and can attend BARS International Conferences, Early Career and Postgraduate Conferences and other events that the Association organises. Your dues also support the open-access publication of The BARS Review and BARS’ continuing work connecting Romanticists in Britain, Europe, the United States, Australasia and the wider world.

BARS will soon be conducting a membership survey to gather your feedback on the events and opportunities you value most. This will help us continue to meet the needs of our members, and we look forward to hearing your thoughts!

Thank you for being a member of BARS.

Wishing you a joyful holiday season,

Yimon Lo 

Membership Secretary, BARS

CFP: OGOM Conference 2025: CFP

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Sea changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river

Conference page: https://www.opengravesopenminds.com/sea-changes-2025/

Venue: The British Library, London, UK (and online) Date: 5–6 September 2025

Full fathom five thy father lies;
Of his bones are coral made;
Those are pearls that were his eyes:
Nothing of him that doth fade,
But doth suffer a sea-change
Into something rich and strange.
Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell:
                                             Ding-dong.
Hark! now I hear them,—ding-dong, bell.

(The Tempest, i. 2. 400–07)

Fabulous, enchanted beings, hybridly human and other, populate the expanses of water of myth and folklore, whether oceans, rivers, and lakes or their boundaries. Such locations swarm with merfolk, nereids and other water nymphs, nixies, merrows, selkies, finfolk, kelpies, rusalkas. We want also, however, to give attention to and arouse discussion around their non-European counterparts: Mami Wata (West Africa), yawkyawk (Australia), iara (Brazil), ningyo (Japan), mondao (Zimbabwe), siyokoy (Philippines) and many more. All these beings are often alluring, frequently dangerous.

In the West, oceanic beings take the form of merfolk, haunting the seas and luring humans into the depths. Rivers and lakes swim with nymphs, nixies, kelpies, and more. In regions such as the Shetlands and Orkneys selkies – hybrids between seal and human – are found on the shorelines. 

The fluidity of water itself mirrors the tendency for such beings to be themselves shifting and protean; their hybridity through metamorphosis is dynamic. It suggests the quality of those who are both terrestrial and aquatic, those conscious beings embodied in a fluid medium, the substance from wherein life itself originates. 

Hybridity and genre

The hybrid form of the mermaid, both piscine and mammalian, corresponds to the liminal quality of where these beings are most frequently encountered – the ambivalent border between land and sea of the shoreline. Selkies, metamorphosing between seal and human, are in the traditional tales perhaps even more associated with the shore.

The hybridity of these creatures is easily accommodated by the hybridity of genres that contemporary narratives employ. For example, in Melanie Golding’s The Replacement (2023), selkie folklore encounters the procedural detective genre in an unsettlingly ambiguous way. The commingling of Gothic horror, folklore, and analytical crime thriller subverts the rationalist mode of the latter by generating the mode of the Fantastic. Here, the vulnerability of motherhood, outsider communities, and mental illness come into focus. More generic cross-fertilisation comes with the presence of mermaids in Gothic-tinged Neo-Victorian novels such as Imogen Hermes Gowar, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock (2018), and Jess Kidd’s merrow fantasy, Things in Jars (2020).

There are mermaids in science fiction, which are often monstrous (thus involving horror and thriller genres): Mira Grant, Into the Drowning Deep (2017), for example, results in the scenario of humanity pitted against the aquatic as Otherness, but also revealing a nature wounded by instrumental reason in this climate change thriller, and an ambiguity about the centrality of the human. A recurring theme concerning communication plays against the absoluteness of the Other, too. The collapse of a love affair between two women, one a deep-sea explorer, is figured poignantly as SF with overtones of Cosmic Horror in Julia Armfield’s Our Wives Under the Sea (2022).

Dangerous seduction

The allure of the mermaid is most often dangerous. It is disruptive of social norms and even the natural coherence of the self and the boundaries between human and animal. This danger may be concealed in comic mode as in H. G. Well’s The Sea-Lady (1902) or the films with the enchanting Glynis Johns, Miranda (1948) and its sequel Mad About Men (1954).  But this may also hold more inviting, enchanting prospects, including the pleasures and pitfalls of romantic fantasy, as from La Motte Fouqué’s Undine (1811) to the forlorn heroine of Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ (1837), then present-day paranormal romance. This latter genre frequently reworks Andersen’s tale. Related examples are the more gently innocuous Splash (1984), a Romcom with hints, like many of these works, of utopian freedom, and other romantic variants such as The Shape of Water (2017) (loosely based, like paranormal romance, on ‘Beauty and the Beast’ (1740). More sinister variants emerge such as Clemence Dane’s The Moon is Feminine (1938), even to overt horror like The Lure (2015). In a more sensational vein, there are many low-budget horror films where the mermaid is simply monstrous, as Mamula [Nymph] (2014).

In the early twentieth century, the darker, Gothic aspect appears in J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan narratives. The mermaids represent death and oblivion. In the scene on Marooner’s Rock (a place where sailors were tied up and drowned), Wendy is dragged by her feet into the water by mermaids. For the first time Peter is afraid, a drum is beating within him, and it is saying ‘to die will be an awfully big adventure’. 

The dangerously seductive sexuality of the mermaid is frequently associated with music – they sing with irresistible glamour, dance, or play the harp. In Thomas Moore’s ‘The origin of the harp’ from Irish Melodies (1845), the tragic sea maiden, singing under the sea for her lost lover, is transformed into a harp; there are associations with Irish Nationalism here. The harp as siren or mermaid is also explored in Henry Jones Thaddeus’s painting The Origin of the Harp of Elfin (1890). The harp is prominent in Scandinavian lore as the instrument of the Danish river spirit, the Neck (Nökke). He sits on the water and plays his golden harp, the harmony of which operates on all of nature.

The Lorelei is one famous incarnation of these sinister songstresses. In Kafka’s paradoxical tale, it is the silence of the Sirens that is dangerous. (The Sirens – who were originally birdlike – become identified with mermaids in the early Christian era; the overwhelming glamour of their song is notorious.) The piscine may also overlap with the serpentine as in the legend of Melusine; we are interested not just in mermaids and selkies but less-known creatures, especially the more monstrous such as kelpies, merrows and Jenny Greenteeth.

Avatars and adaptation

Mermaids and their kin are depicted in many ways, from medieval romance and the ballad to Romantic poetry (as in Thomas Moore) and beyond. They flourished in the Victorian period, too, with painting and the poetry of George Darley, Thomas Hood, Tennyson and Arnold. Thus, we are keen to hear from scholars of these periods, which produced some key mermaid narratives.

For example, Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Fisherman and His Soul’ (1891) is a complex working out of the conflicts of the spirit and the flesh, earth and heaven. The fisherman lives happily with the mermaid until his rejected soul returns. Corrupted without heart or conscience, it claims the fisherman’s life in a manner similar to Dorian Gray, written in the same year.

Adaptations, of folklore and of such archetypal tales as ‘The Little Mermaid’ are of especial interest. These might include sympathetic revisions of the monstrous Sea Witch from ‘The Little Mermaid’ (Sarah Henning, Sea Witch (2018)), along with the many reworkings and expansions of that tale itself, often as paranormal romance, usually with a contemporary feminist slant (for example, the YA novel Fathomless (2013) by Jackson Pearce, Christina Henry’s The Mermaid (2018) and Louise O’Neill’s The Surface Breaks (2018)). We would note the rich tradition of folkloric adaptation in Eastern European filmmaking, especially in animation (in particular, with ‘The Little Mermaid’); a gorgeous animated example is the Russian Rusalochka [The Little Mermaid] (1968). 

Mermaids in art

The mermaid is an enduring and widespread image in paintings from the classical period to the present. Mermaids appear in the work of Ancient Greek vase painters and medieval miniaturists, and in the paintings of Rubens and Raphael, Turner, and the Pre-Raphaelites (notably Burne-Jones and Waterhouse). They fascinated the symbolists (Moreau, Bocklin, Klimt) and surrealists (Magritte and Delvaux) alike and lurk in the enchanting book illustrations of Rackham’s Undine (1909) and Peter Pan (1906), Dulac’s The Little Mermaid (1911) and Heath-Robinson’s ‘Sultan and the Mer-Kid’ from Bill the Minder (1912).

In the nineteenth century, paintings (mainly by men) of sirens and mermaids were depicted as sexually alluring and predatory in contrast to the ‘ondines’, who were the cultured pearls of modern passive femininity (as shown in the paintings of Pierre Dupuis). Mermaids at Play is a series of orgiastic marine fantasies painted by Arnold Böcklin in the 1880s. 

Mermaids in late Victorian art are murderous, preying on adventurers, fishermen, sailors and poets. Waterhouse showed a doomed sailor drowning under the haughty gaze of his seductress in The Siren (1900) whilst Edvard Munch’s The Lady from the Sea (1896) crawls threateningly towards us. The siren in Gustave Moreau’s The Poet and the Siren (1895) pushes the boy poet, who clamours for mercy, into the primal mud from which she emanates. In Burne-Jones’s The Depths of the Sea (1885) a mermaid with hypnotic eyes and a vampire’s mouth is carrying her male prey downwards into oblivion. 

Freudian thought exposed the fish-tailed seductress as the personification of hidden desires of the sexually subconscious; the legacy of this is shown in the twentieth century, when the mermaid abandoned her marine habitat to re-emerge in the irrational dream settings of the surrealist imagination. Magritte’s stranded inverted mermaid, The Collective Invention (1934) humorously undermines the perverse eroticism of her original. 

The global mermaid

Not all of these beings originate in Europe and our colloquy will be much enriched by fishing off further shores. We seek to include explorations of global sea people in folklore and contemporary reworkings, such as Japanese ningyo, Mami Wata and Afro-Caribbean mermaids (Natasha Bowen, Skin of the Sea (2021) and Monique Roffey, The Mermaid of Black Conch: A Love Story (2020)). Many of these facilitate a postcolonial reading of the mermaid and kindred beings.

Ningyō, 人魚 [human fish], have been part of Japanese myth since the year 619 ce (when they appeared in Nihonshoki in Osaka). Whilst the term Ningyō is often translated as mermaid, this is misleading as the Japanese term is not gendered and Ningyō are more varied in shape and often monstrous in appearance. When caught, these piscine-humanoid beings are treated as sacred objects, thought to bring good fortune and immortality. Ningyō fakes or grotesque caricatures appeared from the 1860s onwards. In his 1876 account, Nichols Belfield Denny recounts seeing the circus entrepreneur P. T. Barnum’s celebrated purchase (allegedly from Japanese sailors) which became known as the Fiji Mermaid. 

Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ was translated into Japanese in the 1910s. Its popularity contributed to what Philip Hayward has termed the ‘mermaidisation of the Ningyō’ (evolving into western-like mermaids). In the twentieth century, Kurahashi Yumiko’s parodic rewriting of ‘The Little Mermaid’, translated as ‘A Mermaid’s Tears’, has led to comparisons with Angela Carter. 

This global approach includes recent novels reworking ‘The Little Mermaid’ from a non-Western perspective, such as Rosa Guy, My Love, My Love: Or The Peasant Girl (1985), made into a Broadway musical. Thus, other media are of interest too – Dvorák’s opera Rusalka, drawing on Slavic folklore, stands out.

Selkies

Selkie narratives tend to be more purely romantic and frequently tragic as are the original tales and ballads themselves. One early transformation of selkie folklore into novel is The Secret of Ron-Mor-Skerry by Rosalin K. Fry, filmed as The Secret of Roan Inish (1994), which draws on the selkie to explore feral children and animal parent narratives. Selkie novels often address feminist concerns as in Margo Lanagan’s Margo, The Brides of Rollrock Island (2013). 

Both selkies and mermaids have been enlisted to dramatise the fluidity of the self, particularly with regard to sexuality and gender. Examples are Betsy Cornwell’s excellent YA selkie novel, Tides (2014) and Maggie Tokuda-Hall’s The Mermaid, the Witch and the Sea (2020). They have been taken up as a metaphor for transgender teens: ‘the secret me is a boy; he takes his girliness off like a sealskin’ (Rachael Plummer, ‘Selkie’ (2019)). 

Many of these narratives place the love element foremost, allowing a space for female-centred erotic and gay romance; these forms flourish especially in the recent explosion of self-publishing and on-line texts. 

These creatures facilitate the interaction between humanity and nature (both inner and outer). In their Gothic aspect and engagement with darkness, they may adumbrate a reenchantment of the disenchanted world (following Weber and Adorno); reconciliation with Otherness; and new relationships with the natural world. We are looking for presentations that look at narratives of merfolk and their kin in the light of their Gothic aspects and that highlight their connection with folklore, dwelling on the enchantment of their strange fluidity. We invite contributors to create a dialogue amidst these sea changes into something rich and strange.

Keynote speakers: 

Prof. Catherine Spooner, Professor of Literature and Culture, Lancaster University; on mermaid ambiguity in new creative fiction

Dr Monique Roffey Novelist, Manchester Metropolitan University; as author of The Mermaid of Black Conch on Caribbean mermaids

Dr Sam George Associate Professor, University of Hertfordshire, Co-Convenor of the OGOM Project; on Japanese Ningyo: human-fish hybrids and the rise of the fake museum mermaid 

Dr Katie Garner, Senior Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature, University of St Andrews; on ‘Forging the Mermaid’ – Scottish mermaid project 

Topics may include but are not restricted to:

Aquatic beings and dis/re-enchantment
Liquid bodies and fluid sexuality
Destiny, agency, and biological determinism
Tragedy, comedy, and RomCom
The natural world and environmental issues
Global and postcolonial merfolk
Musicality and the Siren’s song
Film, TV, and new media
Adaptation of folklore and fiction
YA and children’s literature
Paranormal Romance
The Gothic and the monstrous in the depths
Hybrid bodies, hybrid genres
Kelpies and water-bulls, merrows and other less-known creatures of the depths
Relationships with the Other
Borders and shorelines
Animality/culture
The merfolk of medieval Romance
Retellings of ‘The Little Mermaid’
Disneyfication of ‘The Little Mermaid’ and its controversies
Retellings of selkie stories
Blue Humanities and aquatic bodies
Eastern European folklore, fiction, and film
Mami Wata and her kin
Aquatic dissolution of the self
Merfolk and selkie ballads
The mermaid in Victorian poetry and painting
Fake mermaids/sacred objects from the sea

Submission:

Abstracts (200–300 words) for twenty-minute papers or proposals for panels, together with a short biography (150 words), should be submitted by 7 February 2025 as an email attachment in MS Word document format to ogomproject@gmail.com

Please prefix the document title with your surname. The abstract should be in the following format: (1) Title (2) Presenter(s) (3) Institutional affiliation (4) Email (5) 5–10 keywords (6) Abstract.

Panel proposals should include (1) Title of the panel (2) Name and contact information of the chair (3) Abstracts of the presenters.

Please state whether you would prefer to present online or in person. Presenters will be notified of acceptance after the deadline has passed in 2025.

There will be an opportunity to submit your paper for our OGOM publications.

Visit us at OpenGravesOpenMinds.com and follow us on X via @OGOMProject.  

Stephen Copley Research Awards 2024 (Round Two): Awardees Announced

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The BARS Executive Committee established the Stephen Copley bursary scheme in order to support postgraduate and early-career research within the UK. The bursaries primarily fund expenses incurred through travel to libraries and archives necessary for the applicant’s research, alongside other research-focused costs, such as (but not limited to) photocopying, scanning, and childcare. Please do join us in congratulating the very worthy winners and their projects:

Samiha Begum (Sheffield) ‘Digitising Women Writers in the Royal Literary Fund’

Jake Robert Elliot (Roehampton)‘William Blake and London: The Artist Visualising London’

Jodie Marley (Independent) ‘The Scott Family and Edinburgh Romanticism’

Jordan Welsh (Independent)‘Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Hyman Hurwitz’

Once they have completed their research projects, each winner will write a brief report. These reports will be published on the BARS Blog and circulated through our social media. For more information about the bursaries, including reports from past winners, please visit our website: www.bars.ac.uk.

Dr Gerard McKeever
Bursaries Officer, BARS
10/12/24

Romantic Poets in the Wild #8: Brenna Lopes

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For our last RPW of the year (we’ll pick it up again in January 2025!) we are delighted to feature the visual art of Brenna Lopes. Brenna Cameron Lopes is a Massachusetts-based artist whose work centers on the naturalistic and fantastic. She is inspired by the way that mythology, folklore, and fairy tales forge a connection between the self and the natural world, and her art often settles at the meeting point of empirical observation and imaginative contemplation. She is forever chasing a sense of softness in her work, and trying to weave the tangled threads of her interest in history, literature, mythology, esotericism, and natural sciences into facets of her personal artistic tapestry. 

Having studied English Literature at the graduate level, her work is informed by the poetry and writing which has colored her academic interests — specifically that which focuses on natural minutiae and mythical interpretation.

She works primarily in oil paint and pencil. Her stream-of-consciousness-style sketchbook pages form the foundation of her creative practice, and are the roots from which her oil paintings grow.

Brenna submitted both sketches and oil paintings (some of which you might find on her Instagram) so I have been able to pick some out to feature here. I almost never get to write about visual art, so this is a lot of fun for me!

Brenna Lopes (not) in the wild.

Brenna was kind enough to tell us more about how her MLitt in Romantic Worlds (University of Glasgow) has helped shape her interest in intersections between literature and art:

I wrote my masters dissertation on Charlotte Smith’s botanical poetry, specifically on how her unique approach to botanizing, poetry, and natural history arose from her engagement with the work of contemporary male writers Erasmus Darwin and Gilbert White, yet developed into a unique style that merges timely discussions of natural history with her own distinct poetic voice. After the masters, I found that my work became informed by the elements of Romantic Literature which focus on natural minutiae and mythical interpretation, with an emphasis on emotion and imagination. I enjoy depicting people, particularly women, interacting with their environments, both physical and emotional. I am particularly attached to ideas of entanglement and interconnection, thus the environments in my work are often tangled up in various disciplinary interests, archetypal imagery, memories, and dreams. Nature as a symbol of hope, constancy, and comfort is a theme I absorbed from Smith’s work, and something that persists throughout mine. While my literary interests are wide ranging, Romanticism is ever at the core, and I feel that echoes of it are evident in my artistic work, whether directly or tangentially.

Sketches

This piece from Lopes’s sketchbook features a quote by Dorothy Wordsworth:

“It was a sweet morning – Everything green and overflowing with life, and the streams making a perpetual song with the thrushes and all the little birds”

This piece tries to capture, I think, something of the feeling of the wide net that Dorothy Wordsworth’s observations about nature tends to cast in her prose writings. The “perpetual song” seems to draw into it flowers and leaves, the lightness of hummingbirds’ wings (“chasing a sense of softness”), but also the parts of architecture that we can see, and what is not there–a bit of darkness cupping the statue in the top left corner, or settling around the plants in the lower right: as if things emerging and disappearing into the pressure behind the pencil were a force surrounding the world. Even the pencil shavings themselves seem to be arranged in contrast to the rest of the scene, making a three-dimensional representation that moves into and out of the paper as well as across it. The pencil also completes (if I may be so bold) the triangulation of the hummingbirds, as if it were a third bird; and this draws the eye to a blank spot near the top of the page, and to the sense that the unfinishedness of these objects is part of what makes them whole.

“it is an astonishment to be alive, and it behoves you to be astonished”

This sketch invites us to think about some comparisons: between a forest lane, on the one hand, and the gothic architecture of a place of worship; between a drooping hand–I see a hand that is clinging to life, but you are welcome to see it in a different light–and a branch of leaves that works its way up the page as if navigating interior space; and between two swans, curled in a protective pose, and a person looking “off screen” whose features fade away into ghostliness. Perhaps the “astonishment” is that life contains or might contain all of these things together, moving instinct, intellect, nature and design into the same contemplative purview.

Oil Paintings

Flora and the Country Green (2023)

Inspired by a line from Keats’ “Ode to a Nightingale”:

"O, for a draught of vintage! that hath been
Cool'd a long age in the deep-delved earth,
Tasting of Flora and the country green,
Dance, and Provençal song, and sunburnt mirth!"

Portrait of a Dryad (2023)

Looking back on Flora and the Country Green, I think about the way that poetical lines can be autonomous jumping-off points for new creative responses; especially, I think, where they make or suggest a mythological dimension. Mythological thinking means, on one level, that we can derive or extrapolate something new from a piece of our experience, or grow a fragment of thought into a whole idea. We can see it in the cover of Matthew Sangster’s book An Introduction to Fantasy (Cambridge UP, 2023), which uses the line of a river to draw the eye forward into a vista featuring a dragon and a magical castle (and which Lopes illustrated!). Lopes’s work is proof of this way of thinking:

the lightness centered in the dryad's face,
hath found its mirror in the leaves of plants,
and solemn thought, though in a lonely place
might make a tune to which the Heart can dance.

Sweet Remembrancers (2024)

A series of oil paintings inspired by the Huntington Botanical Gardens in California. The title is an allusion to the final lines in Charlotte Smith’s “The Horologue of the Fields”:

"Thus in each flower and simple bell,
That in our path untrodden lie,
Are sweet remembrancers who tell
How fast the winged moments fly."

So long . . . until we meet again!

That’s it for this first series of Romantic Poets in the Wild! You can go back and check out the other featured artists by clicking on the blog’s #romanticpoetsinthewild hashtag–it should bring you to a page where you can peruse the entire series. It sure has been fun meeting the people who responded to the original call for contributors, and working with them to share their work with the world! We already have a few names lined up for next year, including Clay Johnson, John Gallas, Sophia Haywood, and Ezra Shaw. But we need more! So without further ado . . .

Romantic Poets in the Wild: Call for Contributors (2025)

Are you a writer, musician, or visual artist who has been inspired by Romanticism/the Romantics and would like to have your work featured on the BARS blog? Please get in touch with our series editor and Comms Fellow Adam Neikirk by emailing him (adamneikirk@gmail.com) or reaching out on social media. Adam doesn’t use X/Twitter anymore, but is available via BlueSky, Instagram, or Facebook! We love to hear from all creative people, no matter where you are at in terms of your career; and we especially love to hear from academics and scholars of Romanticism who have a creative bone! So please reach out!

Until next time!

Adam Neikirk

Opportunity: Jane Austen Society of the UK Tributes

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The Jane Austen Society of the UK (registered charity number 1200422 – https://janeaustensociety.org.uk/) will be celebrating this important anniversary in 2025.  One of the events which the Society is hosting is an online oral record of tributes to Jane Austen, each lasting not more than two minutes, which the Society would make publicly available on its website.

More details about the proposal can be found here: https://janeaustensociety.org.uk/jane-austen/2-minute-tributes/how-to-contribute/

Although we envisage an oral recording, which the trustees thought might be less daunting for our membership, video presentations are also acceptable provided that they stay within the 2 minute limit.

Contributions should be sent by email to 250@jasoc.org.uk.  The content is entirely up to the contributor, but the two minute limit will be strictly applied.

If you have any questions, do not hesitate to ask. 

SPECIAL ISSUE: The Scarlet Thread of Murder (Linguæ & – Journals of Modern Languages and Cultures Rivista di lingue e culture moderne)

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The Scarlet Thread of Murder. An Album of Victorian Murderers.

Moving from the Newgate Novel tradition at the beginning of the 19th century, through De Quincey’s aesthetic musings on the fine art of murder, to Arthur Machen’s decadent impostors/assassins at the end of the century, via Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s sensational murderers, this special issue of Linguae& will present a gallery of ‘magnificent’ murderers and their representations on stage, in songs and ballads, across the various forms of material culture and, of course, in literature and the popular press. Alongside murder and murderers, we welcome proposals looking at poisoners, torture, sacrifice, monstrous killers, corpses and their representation, gender, body horror at large, and the sundry “ruinations of the human subject” (in the words of Kelly Hurley) that bleed across the Long Victorian Age

Authors wishing to propose a paper for this special issue should register on the journal web site and upload their papers preferably in English, no later than 15 June 2025. See sections: For Authors and Submissions.

Only papers which fully comply with the requirements will be accepted for the double-blind peer review process.

Editors:

Ruth Heholt (Un. Falmouth) Francesca Saggini (Un. Tuscia) Anna Enrichetta Soccio (Un. Chieti)

Linguæ & – Journals of Modern Languages and Cultures Rivista di lingue e culture moderne (eISSN 1724-8698) is a top tier peer-reviewed journal devoted to interdisciplinary research on language and literature, giving voice to a cross-cultural and multi-genre koine. Linguæ & is published twice a year, in June and December, and generally features miscellaneous contributions in the fields of language and culture. Special editorial topics will be advertised well in advance. The Journal is indexed in Web of Science and DOAJ