Romantic Realignments is one of the longest-running research seminars in Oxford.

Past speakers have included Marilyn Butler, Gerard Carruthers, David Chandler, Heather Glen, Paul Muldoon, Philip Shaw, Fiona Stafford and Peter Swaab, to name but a few.

All are very welcome to submit an abstract — we aim to provide a friendly 'workshop' setting in which speakers can try out new papers as well as more finished pieces, and in which lively discussion can flourish.

Held on Thursdays at 5.15pm, Seminar Room A, St Cross (English Faculty) Building.

If you would like to send us an abstract or suggest a speaker, please contact the current convenors Katherine Fender, Sarah Goode and Honor Rieley at: romantic.realignments@gmail.com

04/03/2010

One-day Postgraduate and Early Careers Forum: Women, History and Sexuality

April 1st 10.30 am, Bishop Otter Campus, University of Chichester, H144


South Coast Eighteenth-Century and Romantic Research Group (SCERRG)


We are pleased to announce a one-day postgraduate forum on 'Women, History and Sexuality'. The conference is interdisciplinary, combining approaches from the fields of English, history and philosophy, and discussing both contemporary feminism and the literature and history writing of the long eighteenth century. The theme is a 'light' one with speakers presenting on a variety of topics.




Plenary speakers are: Dr Sue Morgan (Chichester), editor of The Feminist History Reader; and Dr Nina Power (Roehampton), author of One Dimensional Women (2009), speaking on issues in contemporary feminism. Entry is free and all are welcome. To register an interest, contact Fiona Price (F.Price@chi.ac.uk) or Debs Brown (heydeba@gmail.com).


In Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818), her naive but ingenuous heroine Catherine Moreland notoriously pronounces that ‘real solemn history ‘either vex[es] or wear[ies]’ her: ‘the men all so good for nothing, and hardly any women at all’. Nonetheless, the eighteenth-century saw a rapid expansion in the forms of historical discourse, including a new emphasis on histories about and by women, and an invigoration of fictionalised forms of history. This forum will examine women’s often troubled relationship with the discourses of history and sexuality.


Preliminary Schedule


10.30 Introduction: Dr Fiona Price, 'Romantic women writers and the fictions of history: some introductory remarks';


10.40 - 11.10 Short plenary and questions: Dr Susan Morgan 'Duty and desire: historicising women and sexuality';


11.15-12.30 panel 1 ;


12.30 - 1.15 lunch;


1.30-2.45 panel 2;


2.45-3 tea break;


3-4.15 Plenary 2: Dr Nina Power 'One-Dimensional Woman: Work and the Illusion of Emancipation'.

10/02/2010

Open University Romantic Period Seminar

A reminder of the next two meetings of the new Romantic Period Seminar in London organised by the Open University in conjunction with the Institute of English Studies this spring, part of the initial series of three seminars organised under the title ‘Romantic Women Writers Revisited’. Full details of location and speakers are available at www.sas.ac.uk/events/list/ies_whatson, but in summary:


17th February 2010: Dr Julian North (Leicester), ‘Letitia Landon: Biography and the Poetess’


10th March 2010: Prof Jacqueline Labbe (Warwick), ‘Reading Jane Austen after reading Charlotte Smith’


Sessions will run from 5.30 through to 7.30. Discussion of the formal paper will be informed by short readings relevant to the paper. These reading-lists are available on the website. All are very welcome, especially postgraduate students.


Questions, expressions of interest, and further inquiries may be directed to the organiser, Dr Nicola J.Watson (n.j.watson@open.ac.uk).’

14/01/2010

How To Find Us

Once you're in Oriel College, just ask for the MacGregor Room


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16/11/2009

2010

Welcome back to Romantic Realignments! The term's events will be released here very soon.


Below I post the papers given at Romantic Realignments in Trinity term 2009, since they are now relegated from "recently at Romantic Realignments" to the dusty depths of the archive.


TRINITY TERM '09


Week 1 – Thursday 30th April
'Truth and Reality in Byron's Don Juan'
Dr Nicholas Halmi (University College, Oxford)


Week 2 – Thursday 7th May
'Keats reading Catullus - a glance into Cockney Classicism' Henry Stead (Open University / St.Hilda's College, Oxford)


Week 3 – Thursday 14th May
'"May JOHN look on PAT as his brother": The Stage Irishman in the 1790s'
Dr David O’Shaughnessy (Linacre College, Oxford)


Week 4 – Thursday 21st May
'"Lost in Stormy Visions": Shelley's Adonais and The Triumph of Life'
Prof. Michael O'Neill (Durham University)


Week 5 – Thursday 28th May
'Playing with Sorcery after the Tales of 1001 Nights'
Prof. Marina Warner (University of Essex)


Week 6 – Thursday 4th June
'Romantic Ruin: Dwelling in the Time of Waste'
Will Viney
&
'"The clear universe of things around": Lucretius, Michel Serres, and Shelley's early poetry'
Heather Yeung


Week 7 – Thursday 11th June
''Upon the Spanish Mountains, Jerusalem': the role of St. Teresa of Avila in William Blake’s visual pilgrimage narratives'
Kathryn Barush (Wadham College, Oxford)
&
'"I will write a book on leaves of flowers": Hermeneutics and Blake’s Ecopoetics'
Devin Zuber (University of Osnabrück, Germany)


Week 8 – Thursday 18th June
'On Byron, editing and exile'
Dr Jane Stabler (University of St Andrews)

01/10/2009

Call for Papers - Romantic Graduate Forum

Michaelmas Term Call for Papers
Tuesdays of Weeks 2, 4, 6 and 8 of Michaelmas Term
5.30-7.30pm The Bajpai Room, Balliol College


Romantic Graduate Forum invites proposals for papers for the Michaelmas Term schedule. RGF provides an arena for postgraduates to try out ideas, prepare for conferences and discuss their work in progress. Papers on all topics bearing on the field are welcome and should be around 20 minutes; please contact either James Baxendine (james.baxendine@magd.ox.ac.uk) or Anna Camilleri (anna.camilleri@balliol.ox.ac.uk) with a title and short summary of your topic.

29/09/2009

How to find us

Once your in Oriel College, just ask for the MacGregor Room (for weeks 2-8) Week 1 we're in the Basil Mitchell Room.



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25/05/2009

Marina Warner

For our 5th week seminar, Professor Marina Warner (University of Essex) will be speaking on –


'Playing with Sorcery after the Tales of 1001 Nights'


Thursday 28th May, 5:15pm, Ferrar Room, Hertford.


To find a little bit out about Marina Warner's work, go to http://www.marinawarner.com/.