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

  • Contributors

Veronica Alfano is an assistant professor at Delft University of Technology and a Research Fellow at Australian Catholic University. She has published numerous articles and chapters on gender, genre, and memory in Victorian poetry. With Andrew Stauffer, she is coeditor of the essay collection Virtual Victorians: Networks, Connections, Technologies; with Lee O’Brien, she will guest edit the summer 2019 issue of Victorian Poetry. Her first book is titled The Lyric in Victorian Memory: Poetic Remembering and Forgetting from Tennyson to Housman (Palgrave, 2017).

Janis McLarren Caldwell is a former physician, now an associate professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is the author of Literature and Medicine in Nineteenth-Century Britain: from Mary Shelley to George Eliot (Cambridge University Press, 2004), and she is now at work on a project on the interrelationship of psychology and poetry in the nineteenth-century Britain.

Jordan Kistler is a lecturer in English at Keele University. She is the author of Arthur O’Shaughnessy: A Pre-Raphaelite Poet in the British Museum (Routledge, 2016). Her research focuses on the intersections between science and literature in the nineteenth century.

Adam Mazel received his PhD in English language and literature from the University of Michigan in 2014. His essay on Christina Rossetti and a culture of women’s riddle writing was published by Victorian Literature and Culture, and his essay on the verse culture of Victorian Cambridge is forthcoming in Nineteenth-Century Literature.

Alicia Williams is a PhD candidate at Rutgers University. She is working on a dissertation titled Broadly Speaking: Democratic Address and the History of Reading in Nineteenth-Century British Literature, which examines the relationship between formal conventions for addressing readers and the growth of the mass reading public over the course of the century.

R. H. Winnick, an independent scholar, received his PhD in English and American Literature from Princeton University in 1976. He coauthored (with Lawrance Thompson) Robert Frost: The Later Years, 1938–1963 (Holt, [End Page 257] Rinehart & Winston, 1977) and edited Letters of Archibald MacLeish, 1907 to 1982 (Houghton Mifflin, 1983). His other publications include article-length studies on Chaucer’s “Shipman’s Tale” (in The Chaucer Review); Sidney’s Astrophel and Stella (in Notes and Queries); Shakespeare’s Sonnets (in Literary Imagination and N&Q); Melville’s Moby-Dick (in Nineteenth-Century Literature); Hardy’s poetry and fiction (in The Hardy Review); and Larkin’s poetry and letters (in About Larkin and N&Q). He is currently working on a study of previously unidentified allusions in the poetry of Tennyson. [End Page 258]

...

pdf

Share