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Speakers for the 2005–06 academic session
will be announced shortly.
All papers are presented on Tuesdays at 5:15pm,
in Room x3.04 of the
Humanities Building, Colum Drive, Cardiff University CF10 3XB
(tel. +44 (0)29 2087 6339).

Guest speakers and conferences from previous sessions:
Ben
Colbert (Wolverhampton), ‘ “By the Miracle
of Romance”: Literary Tourism on the Rhine, 1780–1840’
(8 March 2005).
Irene
Morra (Cardiff), ‘Inscribing Music in Literature’
(1 Mar 2005).
Rick
Rylance (Exeter), ‘Reading with a Mission: A
History of Penguins’ (8 Feb 2005).
Helen
Phillips (Cardiff): ‘Ballad, Tombstone, Epitaph,
Poem, Newspaper, and Novel: Charlotte Brontë and Robin
Hood’ (14 December 2004).
Rolf
Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber (Pittsburgh): ‘The
Guide to Irish Fiction, 1650–1900: Themes, Findings, and
Prospects’ (30 November 2004).
Maureen
Bell (Birmingham): ‘Women in the 17th-Century
Book Trade’ (23 November 2004).
John
Strachan (Sunderland): ‘Bear’s Grease and
Macassar: Cultural Representations of Hair Oil in Dickens and
Early Victorian Fiction’ (2 November 2004).
Julia
Thomas (Cardiff), ‘Why the Victorians Loved Shakespeare:
19th-Century Visual Representations of Shakespeare’s Works’
(16 Mar 2004)
Caroline
Franklin (Swansea), ‘Mary Wollstonecraft, the
French Revolution and the Power of the Press’ (9 Mar 2004)
Tom
Hahn (Rochester), ‘Grafting the New World: Text and
Image in the First Book in English on America’ (9 Dec
2003).
Andrew
van der Vlies (Oxford), ‘Whose Beloved Country?
Rethinking the “Hypercanonical” Status of Alan Paton’s
Cry, the Beloved Country ’ (2 Dec 2003).
John
Hines (Cardiff), ‘Household Words: The Publication
of Bleak House in the Wake of the Great Exhibition’
(18 Nov 2003).
Karen
O’ Brien (Warwick), ‘The History Women:
Women Writing History, 1760–1820’ (14 Oct 2003).
Peter
D. Macdonald (Oxford), ‘Discipline Envy and Book
History’ (25 Mar 2003).
Ruth
Evans (Cardiff), ‘A Future for Literature? Book History
and the History of Margery Kempe’ (25 Feb 2003).
Duncan
Wu (Oxford), ‘Talking Pimples: Hazlitt and Byron
in Love’ (4 Feb 2003).
Alan
Dessen (North Carolina, Chapel Hill), ‘Eavesdropping
on a Conversation: Reading English Renaissance Stage Directions’
(19 Nov 2002).
Angela
Wright (Sheffield), ‘Writing and Terrorism: Defining
the Gothic Genre in the 1790s’ (12 Nov 2002).
Richard
Sugg (Cardiff), Murder after Death:
Anatomy and Analysis in Renaissance Literature (29 Oct
2002).
Andrew
Murphy (St Andrews), The History of the Schools Edition
of Shakespeare (23 Apr 2001).
Jane
Moore (Cardiff), Editing Thomas Moores Satires
(19 Mar 2001).
William
St Clair (Cambridge), Who Read What in the Romantic
Period? (12 Mar 2001).
Bill
Bell (Edinburgh), Terra Incognita: Reading at the
Edge of the World (19 Feb 2001).
Nick
Groom (Bristol), Dead Poet Walking: What Wordsworth
Thought of Chatterton, the Marvellous Boy, The Sleepless Soul
that Perishd in its Pride (5 Feb 2001).
Warwick
Gould (IES, London), W. B. Yeats and the Moment
of the Collected Works (11 Dec 2001).
Paul
Goldman, The Art of Illustration: The Pre-Raphaelites
and the Idyllic School of Artists (27 Nov 2001).
Hans
Walter Gabler (Munich), Manuscripts: Tracing the Grounds
of Creativity in Process (20 Nov 2001).
Aled
Jones (Aberystwyth), Welsh Missionary Writing in British
India (16 Oct 2001).
Ina
Ferris (Ottowa), Curious Reason:
Pedantry, History, and Scotts Figure of the Antiquary
(24 Apr 2001).
Simon
Eliot (Reading), The Reading Experience Database and
the New Initiatives in Book History Research (27 Mar 2001).
Bill
McCormack (Goldsmiths), Editing Diaries: The Case
of Roger Casement, 18641916 (13 Mar 2001).
Joanne
Shattock (Leicester), Bibliography in an Electronic
Age: Revising the Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature
(27 Feb 2001).
Rolf
Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber (Pittsburgh), Beyond
the Canon: The Bibliographical Reconstruction of 18th- and 19th-Century
Irish Fiction (5 Dec 2000).
Emma
Clery (Sheffield Hallam), The Escalation of Womens
Writing 17501830: The Search for Critical Paradigms
(21 Nov 2000).
Clifford
Siskin (Glasgow), What Writing Wants:
The Fair Intellectual Club of Edinburgh 1717 (31 Oct 2000).
Jacqueline
Pearson (Manchester), Textual Variations and Inconsistencies
in Susanna Centlivres The Basset Table (1705):
Politics, Intertextuality, and Play Publication in the Early
18th Century (10 Oct 2000).
Michael
Wheeler (Chawton/Southampton), Reading
in the Landscape: Text, Context, and Intertext at Chawton
Library (16 May 2000).
Antony
Atkins (Royal Holloway), Acrobatics on a Budget: Editing
D. H. Lawrences Palimpsests in the Electronic Age
(28 Mar 2000).
Kathryn
Sutherland (Oxford), Speaking Commas: Undermining
Austens Status as an English Classic (15 Feb 2000).
Judith
Stanton, Editing Charlotte Smiths Letters
(9 Mar 1999).
Claire
Lamont (Newcastle), Annotating a Text: Literary Theory
and the Electronic Hypertext (8 Dec 1998).

Facts
and Fictions: Ireland and the Novel in the Nineteenth Century
(Cardiff University, 1416 Sep 2001).
The
Production of Culture: The Scottish Press in a National and
International Context, 1800–1880 (28–30 July 2001).
Scenes
of Writing, 17501850 (Gregynog, 2023 July 1998).
As well as advertising forthcoming events
occuring within the Cardiff Corvey project, we are more than
happy to provide information on any Romantic studies conferences,
open days, etc. held at other institutions. We can
be contacted at Corvey@cf.ac.uk.

Last modified
21 June, 2010
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This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal (Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
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