Studies in Romanticism
@studiesinrom.bsky.social
370 followers 180 following 45 posts
Committed to advancing the study of literature and culture in the dynamic "Romantic Century" of 1750-1850. International in sympathies and interdisciplinary in approaches, SiR publishes the highest caliber scholarship on Romantic-era studies.
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studiesinrom.bsky.social
Joseph Albernaz’s review of Shelley with Benjamin: A Critical Mosaic by Mathelinda Nabugodi.
studiesinrom.bsky.social
James Metcalf’s review of Objects of Liberty: British Writers and Revolutionary Souvenirs by Pamela Buck
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Michael Dettelbach’s review of The Invention of Humboldt: On the Geopolitics of Knowledge, edited by Mark Thurner and Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra
studiesinrom.bsky.social
J. Mark Smith, “The Abandoned and the Forsaken: William Wordsworth, Geoffrey Hartman, Childhood Misfortune, and the Counterseparations of Poetry”
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Alistair Robinson, “Spring, Streets, and Chimney Sweeps: May Day in Regency London and Benjamin Robert Haydon’s Punch (1829)”
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Shuta Kiba, “Erasmus Darwin and the Biopolitics of the Vital Habit”
studiesinrom.bsky.social
We are excited to announce the publication of our Spring 2025 issue, which includes essays by Shuta Kiba, Alistair Robinson, and J. Mark Smith. The issue is available Open Access on Project Muse @projectmuse.bsky.social: muse.jhu.edu/issue/54703. Details in the thread.
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Michael Dettelbach’s review of The Invention of Humboldt: On the Geopolitics of Knowledge, edited by Mark Thurner and Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra
studiesinrom.bsky.social
J. Mark Smith, “The Abandoned and the Forsaken: William Wordsworth, Geoffrey Hartman, Childhood Misfortune, and the Counterseparations of Poetry”
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Alistair Robinson, “Spring, Streets, and Chimney Sweeps: May Day in Regency London and Benjamin Robert Haydon’s Punch (1829)”
studiesinrom.bsky.social
We are delighted to announce that all content from Studies in Romanticism published in 2025 will be available on the Project Muse platform via an Open Access model: muse.jhu.edu/journal/754. @projectmuse.bsky.social
Project MUSE - Studies in Romanticism
muse.jhu.edu
Reposted by Studies in Romanticism
joeykim.bsky.social
Thrilled that our Transromanticism forum edited by Libby Fay is now live @studiesinrom.bsky.social! My article discusses the trans futurity of William Blake’s prophetic images. muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl...
studiesinrom.bsky.social
William Galperin's review of Jamison Kantor's Honor, Romanticism, and the Hidden Value of Modernity
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Jeanne M. Britton's review of Corrina Readioff's Epigraphs in the English Novel, 1750-1850
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Noah Heringman's review of Michael A. Taylor and Ralph O'Connor, eds.,The Old Red Sandstone, or New Walks in an Old Field, by Hugh Miller
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Will Glovinsky's review of Matilde Cazzola's The Political Thought of Thomas Spence: Beyond Poverty and Empire
studiesinrom.bsky.social
S. Yarberry, "The Ancient of Days, Gender, and Poetry: An Interview with TR Brady by S. Yarberry"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
S. Yarberry, "Rage, Embodiment, and Withdrawal: Trans Impossibilities in William Blake's The [First] Book of Urizen"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Elizabeth A. Fay, "Feeling Snaky: Fantasms and the Object of Desire in Keats's 1820 Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Joey S. Kim, "'Humanity knows not of Sex': William Blake's Trans Futurity"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Jessy Nyiri, "Our Androgynes, Ourselves: Trans Allegory in Coleridge’s Aids to Reflection in the Formation of a Manly Character"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Elizabeth A. Fay, "Forum on Transromanticism: Introduction"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Oliver Bedard, "'Whichever Way You Move . . . It Is Ready to Swallow You': The Gothic Atlantic and the Mobile Oubliette"
studiesinrom.bsky.social
Michelle Faubert, "Rolled round in earth's Diurnal course": Mary Shelley, Romantic Science, and Suicide as Natural Death
studiesinrom.bsky.social
We are excited to announce the publication of our Winter 2024 issue, which includes essays by Michelle Faubert and Oliver Bedard, as well as a Forum on Transromanticism, guest edited by Elizabeth A. Fay. Details in the thread.