In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Jim Cheshire is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Art and Design at the University of Lincoln. He is the author of Tennyson Transformed: Alfred Lord Tennyson and Visual Culture (2009) and Stained Glass and the Victorian Gothic Revival (2004). He is currently working on a monograph about Tennyson’s relationship with publishers in the mid-Victorian period.

Sarah Rose Cole is a Lecturer on History and Literature at Harvard University. She is currently completing a book project on the Victorian Bildungsroman, focusing on the connection between male friendship and the formation of the middle-class gentleman. Her articles on the novels of Thackeray and Balzac have appeared in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net.

Tim Dolin is Professor of Literary Studies at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia. He is the author of books and essays on Thomas Hardy, George Eliot, Wilkie Collins, and Charlotte Bronte, and has edited several of Hardy’s novels. He is working on a new Cambridge Edition of The Return of the Native and a study of the uses and meanings of Wessex since 1928, The Real Hardy Country.

Kristen Guest is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Northern British Columbia where she teaches Victorian literature. Her research has appeared in such journals as Victorian Studies, Studies in Romanticism, Victorian Literature and Culture, and the Journal of Victorian Culture, among others. Her current work focuses on the policeman in Victorian literature.

Roslyn Jolly is Associate Professor of English Literature at the University of New South Wales. She is the author of Henry James: History, Narrative, Fiction (1993) and Robert Louis Stevenson in the Pacific: Travel, Empire, and the Author’s Profession (2009).

Manuela Mourão is Associate Professor of English at Old Dominion University. She teaches Nineteenth-Century British Literature and Critical Theory. Her research and writing have focused on representations of sex and gender, Victorian women writers, and the formation of Portuguese racial identity. She is the author of Altered Habits: Reconsidering the Nun in Fiction and co-editor, with Edward Jacobs, of William Harrison Ainsworth’s 1839 novel Jack Sheppard. She is currently working on representations of Portugal and Portuguese culture by nineteenth-century British authors. [End Page 125]

...

pdf

Share