By Andrea H. Everett The William Blake Archive is pleased to announce the publication of electronic editions of Songs of Innocence copies I, X, and Z from the Huntington Library… Read more »
By Sarah Jones Yesterday the Blake Archive reunited three copies of Songs of Innocence that are geographically disparate (I in the United States, X in Australia, and Z in Germany)…. Read more »
By Laura Whitebell I learned a great new phrase at Blake Camp this year: ‘Bus Project’. This is a project that you are in charge of, but that anybody else… Read more »
By marylshannon Anna Glendenning is a PhD candidate from Roehampton’s Centre for Research in Romanticism, who works on caricature. She reports here on the Romantic Illustration Network’s collaboration with the… Read more »
By knlc In my previous post on the material aspects of the Lady’s Magazine (1770-1832), I briefly touched upon the advertisements that were printed on the wrappers of the magazine’s… Read more »
By Eric Loy We’ve blogged a few times about our progress with the Four Zoas encoding project, mostly recounting our efforts to develop a more flexible and dynamic schema as… Read more »
By jd359 The patterns in the Lady’s Magazine have been a subject of My own copy of the Lady’s Magazine included an engraving of three different patterns for watch cases… Read more »
By Anthony Mandal Filed under: Commentary, Events Tagged: childhood, children, fiction, gender, Maria Edgeworth, masculinity, military, nineteenth century, Romanticism, Waterloo …read more Source:: https://crecs.wordpress.com/2015/12/07/children-of-crecs-tomorrow/
By sophiecoulombeau The study of childhood has long been crucial to the interdisciplinary study of the Romantic period. Historians of the family have pinpointed the eighteenth century as crucial for… Read more »
By annamercer90 This post was originally written for BARS. The ‘On This Day’ blog continues with a short piece by Anna Mercer on the winter of 1815, discussing P B… Read more »