“To go on for ever”: Keats to Charles Brown
By The Keats Letters Project Jeanne Britton (University of South Carolina) RE: To Charles Brown, 30 September 1820 …read more Source:: http://keatslettersproject.com/correspondence/to-go-on-for-ever/
By The Keats Letters Project Jeanne Britton (University of South Carolina) RE: To Charles Brown, 30 September 1820 …read more Source:: http://keatslettersproject.com/correspondence/to-go-on-for-ever/
By Anna Mercer The BARS Online Lectures Committee are delighted to announce that Francesca Killoran, a PhD student at the University of York, has been appointed as the BARS Digital… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan This year digital technology has brought us closer together than ever. With geography no object, we’re inviting experts on the Romantic era from all over the world… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan Thursday 1 October, 5.00pm BST (UTC +1)This event is captioned. Dove Cottage is the place where William Wordsworth produced most of his greatest and best-loved poems. After… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan Daniel Johnson (Univ. of Notre Dame), Beth Lau (California State Univ., Long Beach), and Greg Kucich (Univ. of Notre Dame) wish to announce the official launch of… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan The Anne Lister Society is dedicated to fostering sustained research and scholarly conversation about Yorkshire diarist Anne Lister, in order to establish her permanent place in the… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan As in previous years the Keats-Shelley Association of America will award two Carl H. Pforzheimer, Jr. Research Grants of $3,000 each to advanced graduate students, untenured faculty,… Read more »
By Emily Paterson-Morgan Anglistik & Englischunterricht (2022) Guest Editors: Marie Hologa, Sophia Möllers The works of Romantic writers and political philosophers served a morally instructive purpose for the audiences and… Read more »
By Matthew Sangster Elizabeth Neiman is an Associate Professor in both English and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maine. Her research interests include British Romanticism, genre,… Read more »
By Anna Mercer Yesterday, we marked 200 years since William Blake drew ‘Pindar and Lais the Courtesan’ on 18 September 1820. Today, Dr Sibylle Erle (Bishop Grosseteste University) continues her… Read more »