Editor WILL BOWERS

advertisement
Editor
WILL BOWERS
Will Bowers is a doctoral candidate in the English Department at UCL, writing a
thesis on Anglo–Italian cultural interaction in the Romantic period. Will’s interests
include coteries and salons in Regency London, Romantic conceptions of the
public mind, and reading American singer–songwriters as heirs to a poetic
tradition. He has published articles on Leigh Hunt, The Oxford Book of Romantic
Verse, and has an article forthcoming on Byron and tourism.
Contributors
HAZEL WILKINSON
Hazel Wilkinson is a final year PhD student in the English Department at UCL,
preparing a thesis on eighteenth-century editions of Edmund Spenser. She was the
recipient of the 2012–13 Fredson Bowers Award from the Bibliographical Society,
for work on critical bibliography. She has published on typography and printer
identification in The Library (2013).
JULIA TEJBLUM
Julia Tejblum is a PhD candidate in English Literature at Harvard University,
where she coordinates the department's Long 18th Century and Romanticism
Colloquium. Her interests include intertextuality, revision, and consolation in the
poetry of Milton, Wordsworth, Keats, Tennyson, and others. She holds a MSt. in
English Literature (1780–1900) from St. John’s College, Oxford.
ROBERTA KLIMT
Roberta Klimt is a third-year PhD student in the English department at UCL,
working on the eighteenth-century reception of Milton's 1645 Poems. She has a
strong secondary interest in twentieth-century American literature, contemporary
film and television.
MICHAEL SAYEAU
Before joining UCL as a lecturer in 2008, Michael Sayeau studied at Amherst
College and Princeton University, and taught at SUNY Buffalo. Michael’s
book, Against the Event: The Everyday and Evolution of Modernist Narrative,
published by OUP in 2013, examines the relationship between the narrative
rendering of the temporality of lived experience and life stories and wider
developments in the social conception of time. He is also interested in the works of
William Morris, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Ezra Pound, Otto Neurath, and
Roland Barthes.
J. S. CROCKETT
J. S. Crockett is a researcher for the BBC who has previously worked on a
programme on the Romans in Scotland, and is currently researching the Pals
Battalions of the First World War for a documentary to be aired later this year. He
completed his undergraduate and graduate studies in Classics at St. John’s College,
Oxford.
SARAH FOSTER
Sarah Foster works at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre as friends and patrons
assistant. She received her MA in Renaissance Literature from York University,
where she developed an interest in Renaissance drama and the staging of innuendo.
Download