Victorian Poetry
@victorianpoetry.bsky.social
850 followers 190 following 16 posts
Victorian Poetry is a peer-reviewed quarterly dedicated to Victorian poets and poetries (broadly & experimentally construed). Edited by Devin Garofalo, UC San Diego ([email protected]). Learn more: https://victorian-poetry.scholasticahq.com
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jimchesh.bsky.social
Conference Announcement: Tennyson 2026: Ecology, Landscape, Environment - cfp and details attached. Victorians scholars please circulate @lindakhughes.bsky.social @victorianreview.bsky.social @victorianpoetry.bsky.social @thevicsoc.bsky.social @victorianmasc.bsky.social @jofvictculture.bsky.social
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
A new issue of Victorian poetry is live — open access and full of incredible new work! We are also continuing to accept submissions for the 2025 Early Career Essay Prize. See the image / alt-text for more info. Please share widely! muse.jhu.edu/issue/55160
Another stellar issue of VICTORIAN POETRY is now live! The full issue is open access. Its contents are as follows:
 
ANNA RIVERS, “‘Life whetted upon life’: Mathilde Blind, The Ascent of Man, and the Geological Record”
 
BLANCA SANTONJA, “Musical Lights: Illuminating the Shadows in Tennyson’s The Princess”
 
Syntheses of THE YEAR’S WORK in the field, featuring contributions by SUZANNE BAILEY (on Robert Browning), GALIA BENZIMAN (on Thomas Hardy), VERONICA ALFANO (on Gerard Manley Hopkins), FLORENCE S. BOOS (on Pre-Raphaelitism, Dante G. Rossetti, and William Morris), JUSTIN A. SIDER (on Algernon Charles Swinburne),  LINDA K. HUGHES (on Alfred Lord Tennyson), and HEATHER BOZANT WITCHER (on women poets)
 
Victorian Poetry also invites submissions for its 2025 Early Career Essay Prize, which recognizes exemplary essays by untenured scholars of all ranks and affiliations (including contingently employed and graduate student colleagues). Conferred on an annual basis, the prize carries an award of $500 and publication in Victorian Poetry. Strong essays that do not win the award may also be considered for publication as recommended by the prize committee. Applications are due 25 August 2025. Scholars wishing to be considered should submit anonymized MS Word essays and brief CVs to victorianpoetryjournal [at] gmail [dot] com with “Early Career Prize” in the subject line. Prior to submission, please consult our guidelines for authors.
 
For more information about the journal’s latest initiatives, visit our Scholastica webpage. Direct proposals and queries to journal editor Devin M. Garofalo (University of California, San Diego) at victorianpoetryjournal [at] gmail [dot] com.

Scholastica webpage address: https://victorian-poetry.scholasticahq.com
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Excited to share the call for Victorian Poetry’s 2025 Early Career Prize! Please circulate widely. Happy to answer any questions (see the attached CFP for more details)!
Victorian Poetry invites submissions for its 2025 Early Career Essay Prize, which recognizes exemplary essays by untenured scholars of all ranks and affiliations (including contingently employed and graduate student colleagues). Conferred on an annual basis, the prize carries an award of $500 and publication in Victorian Poetry. Strong essays that do not win the award may also be considered for publication as recommended by the prize committee. Applications are due 4 August 2025. Scholars wishing to be considered should submit anonymized MS Word essays and brief CVs to victorianpoetryjournal@gmail.com with “Early Career Essay Prize” in the subject line. Prior to submission, consult our guidelines for authors.
 
Winning articles will be selected according to three criteria: (1) significance of contribution to the field of Victorian poetry (including its involvement with Victorian studies and other areas of inquiry in or beyond literary studies); (2) excellence of research, interpretation, and method; and (3) efficacy of presentation. The journal continues to expand its purview to a wider compass of archives and approaches. We welcome work that capaciously (re)interprets the field's originary contexts and reconsiders Victorian poetry (broadly construed) in new, innovative, cross-disciplinary, theoretical, and / or experimental ways.

For author guidelines, see the following link: https://victorian-poetry.scholasticahq.com
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mmvty.bsky.social
Today's the day! I invite close readers to see if they can find the places where I channeled the most rage into this project. It is supposed to make you uncomfortable. You are supposed to try to dismiss it as "praxis" vs. "theory" and then you are supposed to be convinced otherwise.
princetonupress.bsky.social
In Poetry's Data, @mmvty.bsky.social explores why literary studies must confront digital mediation.

Out now. Learn more about this engaging book: press.princeton.edu/books/hardco...
Poetry's Data: Digital Humanities and the History of Prosody
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Honored to feature your incredible work in it, Linda!
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criticalinquiry.bsky.social
"Does aesthetics play a legitimate role in our evaluation of an argument’s validity? Are computational proofs beautiful?"

From our new issue, read Imogen Forbes-Macphail's "The Four-Color Theorem and the Aesthetics of Computational Proof": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Also check out our recent issue (ed. John Lamb) celebrating VP’s 60th anniversary. It revisits @lindakhughes.bsky.social ‘s formative 2003 issue, “Whither Victorian Poetry?” — a truly blockbuster constellation of thinkers across both issues! muse.jhu.edu/issue/52956
Project MUSE - Victorian Poetry-Volume 61, Number 4, Winter 2023
muse.jhu.edu
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Victorian Poetry is thrilled to announce a new open-access special issue, “Transition and Transformation.” Guest edited by Erik Gray, it features contributions by Florence Boos, Mary Ellis Gibson, @lindakhughes.bsky.social , Britta Martens, & Herbert F. Tucker. muse.jhu.edu/issue/53644
Table of contents for the new special issue, “Transition and Transformation”:

Special issue preface by ERIK GRAY tracing Victorian Poetry’s recent transitions and 
celebrating the field’s debt to JOHN B. LAMB, journal editor from 2005 to 2024
 
LINDA K. HUGHES, “Queer Forms, Queer Grief: Reclaiming and Transcending Loved 
Remains in Tennyson’s In Memoriam and Michael Field’s The Longer Allegiance”
 
MARY ELLIS GIBSON, “Sensation, Sati, and Retribution in Mary E. Leslie’s Sonnets on 
the Indian Mutiny”
 
HERBERT F. TUCKER, “Compost Happens: Composition and Decomposition in 
Victorian Literature”
 
BRITTA MARTENS, “From the Execution Ballad to the Dramatic Monologue: Criminal 
Confession Reconfigured”
 
FLORENCE BOOS, “Morris the Skald: Icelandic Translation as Social Liberation” Table of contents for 60th anniversary issue:

JOHN B. LAMB, “Introduction: The Place of Victorian Poetry”
 
ERIK GRAY, “Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry”

STEPHANIE KUDUK WEINER, “Reflections on Years in Victorian Poetry”

LEE O’BRIEN, “Victorian Women’s Poetry and the Near-Death Experience of a 
Category”
 
MICHELE MARTINEZ, “Undisciplining Art Sisterhood”
 
HELEN GROTH, “Photography, Novelty, and Victorian Poetry”
 
MONIQUE R. MORGAN, “Poetry, Politics, Possibilities”
 
JASON RUDY, “Reaching Wider: Anecdotes from a Victorianist in the Australian 
Archive”
 
LEE BEHLMAN, “Women and Light Verse: On May Kendall”
 
MARION THAIN, “Reading Victorian Poetry as the World Burns”
 
ANDREW M. STAUFFER, “Analog Intelligence”
 
CHARLES LAPORTE, “Victorian Poetry in an Age of Cultural Secularization”
 
LINDA K. HUGHES, “Whithering: Or ’Tis Twenty Years Since”
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vsawc.bsky.social
End of term grading got you down? Why not take a break and work up a proposal for VSAWC's upcoming conference "Exhibiting the Nineteenth Century"? To find out more, click on the link below!

vsawc.org/events/
Image of a season ticket for the Arts & Crafts Exhibition Society from 1890, printed in warm brown ink. The left side of the ticket features an illustration of two artisans, one wearing an apron and holding tools, and the other dressed as a painter. They shake hands over a decorative emblem surrounded by floral motifs. The illustration includes text indicating the location, "121 Regent St. The New Gallery," at the bottom. On the right side, the ticket reads "Season Ticket 1890" in bold lettering, with additional text for "Admission" and instructions, along with the name "Ernest Radford, Secretary." The design of the ticket reflects the style of the Arts and Crafts movement.
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nathankhensley.bsky.social
Patrick & I would be so grateful if ppl would circulate this to their smartest + most interesting academic friends. We are excited to welcome everybody to DC 🙏💙
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Thanks to generous support from @hopkinspress.bsky.social, Victorian Poetry is co-sponsoring next year’s NAVSA conference. The CFP is now live—check it out and submit your work! So looking forward to all of it, including some new journal-related festivities. ✨
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devingarofalo.bsky.social
Announcing the Vcologies Working Group’s 2025 Early Career Prize! Such a great opportunity—see the CFP below for more details.
The Vcologies Working Group announces the 2025 Early Career Paper Prize. The prize
recognizes work by rising scholars that exemplifies the Vcologies effort to consider
ecological thinking in the Anglophone world from 1750-1945.

Early career scholars working in any field are eligible. Graduate students and contingently
employed colleagues are especially encouraged to submit. “Early career” is defined as a scholar
of any rank or affiliation who is working toward a PhD, or who has received the PhD in the past
three calendar years (2021 or later). PhDs from 2020 are also eligible to apply in cases where
parental duties or medical leave have affected research.

The winning paper will be selected according to three criteria: (1) Potential significance for
Victorian studies and its relation to the study of ecology, broadly construed; (2) Quality and
depth of scholarly research and interpretation; (3) Clarity and effectiveness of presentation.
Papers will be anonymized before being forwarded to three judges. The prize award is $250

The prize is open to papers of no more than 3,500 words (not including notes, image captions, or references) written by early career scholars. Please submit papers in MS Word or PDF (with no identifying information on the document itself), along with (as a separate document) a cover sheet stating (1) your name, (2) year of Ph.D. (or year expected), (3) name of your degree-granting institution, (4) title of your essay, and (5) contact information, to Kathleen Frederickson at kfrederickson@ucdavis.edu.
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victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Lots of incredible work on C19 poetries in the forthcoming spring issue of @criticalinquiry.bsky.social (ToC previewed below on the back of the forthcoming winter issue), including brilliant work by Imogen Forbes-Macphail, leader of the Victorian Poetry Caucus! ✨ Watch for both issues!
criticalinquiry.bsky.social
Winter issue is coming soon!
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
A minor change: “and, of course, in honor of”—poorly phrased, we need an edit button!
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Some words in remembrance of Sandra M. Gilbert (and, of course, Susan Gubar), whose field-shifting work on women writers like Elizabeth Barrett Browning shaped not only feminist literary and Victorian studies, but also Victorian poetry in transformative and still-ongoing ways.
Cover of Gilbert and Gubar’s book, Madwoman in the Attic — featuring an image of a woman peeking through a keyhole.
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zooeyziller.bsky.social
📢 CfP: Delighted to invite submissions for the British Association for Romantic Studies ECR & PGR Conference, 'Romantic (Un)Consciousness'.

🗓️ Trinity Hall, Cambridge, 4-5 September, & Online, 12 September 2025

Abstracts due on 6 January 2025.

🔗 More Details: barsconference2025.wixsite.com/home
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patrickleary.bsky.social
Hi again Victorianist peeps! It's lovely to follow so many folks doing such fascinating work. Also to see lots of old friends. I'm re-upping this because VIC has been so quiet lately, and yet it's a great place for longer-form C19 queries, answers, and discussions than can easily be posted here.
patrickleary.bsky.social
Warm welcome to all new followers! To my fellow Victorianists: the VICTORIA discussion group remains a generous, welcoming space, supportive without at all overwhelming your inbox. And the archives are a great resource. If you’re not already a member, check it out: list.iu.edu/sympa/info/v...
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Would love to hear more, sounds wild!
victorianpoetry.bsky.social
Who out there is working on “bad” Victorian or Victorian-adjacent poetry and its aesthetic categories?
mikebaker.bsky.social
Most depressing scientific report ever?

People read human and AI poetry:
• Of the 5 poems rated most likely to be human, 4 were actually AI
• AI was rated more beautiful, inspiring, meaningful + profound
• “people prefer AI-generated poetry to human-authored poetry”

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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victorianreview.bsky.social
We are pleased to announce that the Hamilton Prize winner for 2024 is Olivia Krauze for the essay "What is a Violent Emotion?" We look forward to publishing Olivia's essay in an upcoming issue. The runner up is Lucy Lawrence for an essay on "The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal (1895-97)."
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victorianreview.bsky.social
Hello! It's nice to see you here. Check out our latest issue, VR 49.2 muse.jhu.edu/issue/53136 and stay tuned for 50.1, coming soon, featuring a forum on Victorian studies and the climate crisis and our 2023 Hamilton Prize winner.