{"title":"传记","authors":"","doi":"10.1353/vpr.2023.a937160","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Biographies <!-- /html_title --></li> </ul> <p><strong>Lars Atkin</strong> is a Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Kent. They are codirector of the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies and coeditor of the Curran Index. Their most recent monograph, <em>Writing the South African San: Colonial Ethnographic Discourses</em> (Palgrave, 2021) examined the entanglement between literature and ethnography in nineteenth-century representations of South African Indigenous people. They are coinvestigator on the AHRC-funded \"Victorian Diversities\" network.</p> <p><strong>Stephen Basdeo</strong>, Senior Lecturer in History at the Elizabeth School, London, wrote the first biography of G. W. M. Reynolds, <em>Victorian England's Best-Selling Author: The Revolutionary Life of G. W. M. Reynolds</em> (2022), as well as biographies of Joseph Ritson and Wat Tyler. His current project, <em>Mysteries of the People, Mysteries of the World</em>, examines nineteenth-century \"mysteries\" from Europe, the Americas, and Australia.</p> <p><strong>Caroline Bressey</strong> is Professor of Historical Geography in the Department of Geography, University College London. Her research focuses upon the Black presence in Victorian England, especially London, alongside Victorian anti-racism communities and the links between contemporary identities and the diverse histories of London as represented in heritage sites and museums. She won the Colby Scholarly Book Prize for her first monograph, <em>Empire, Race and the Politics of Anti-Caste</em> (2013), which examined the anti-racist reading community established by Catherine Impey and Celestine Edwards. Her current research project maps the everyday of multiethnic working-class communities of Victorian England.</p> <p><strong>Porscha Fermanis</strong> is Professor of Romantic Literature at University College Dublin. Her latest books are <em>Romantic Pasts: History, Fiction and Feeling in Britain, 1790–1850</em> (2022) and <em>Worlding the South: Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture and the Southern Settler Colonies</em> (coedited with Sarah Comyn, 2021). She is currently completing a monograph entitled <em>Southern Settler Fiction and the Transcolonial Imaginary, 1820–1890</em>.</p> <p><strong>Ryan D. Fong</strong> is an Associate Professor of English at Kalamazoo College. He is completing his first monograph, <em>Unsettling: Indigenous Literatures and the Work of Victorian Studies</em>, which is under contract with SUNY Press. Ryan has published essays in <em>Victorian Studies, Victorian Literature and Culture</em>, and <em>Nineteenth Century Gender Studies</em> and is one of the founding organizers of the digital humanities project Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom.</p> <p><strong>Jennifer Hayward</strong> is Professor of Literature at the Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (Chile) and Virginia Myers Professor of English and Global Media and Digital Studies at the College of Wooster (United States). Her publications include <em>Consuming Pleasures: Active Audiences and Serial Fictions</em> (1997); new editions of Maria Graham's 1824 <em>Journal of a Residence in Chile</em> (2003) and <em>Journal of a Voyage to Brazil</em> (2011); and essays on the British periodical press in Chile. With Michelle Prain-Brice, she codirects Anglophone Chile, a digitization project that has received generous assistance from the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals Field Development Grant (2018) and the Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library (2023).</p> <p><strong>Jenna M. Herdman</strong> completed her PhD at Carleton University (Ottawa, Canada) in 2023. Her research explores the intersection of midcentury Victorian print culture, book history, and the digital humanities, with a particular focus on digital scholarly editing of nineteenth-century print culture texts. Her work has been published in <em>Victorian Periodicals Review, Book History</em>, and the <em>Journal of Victorian Culture</em>. She works as a public servant for the federal government of Canada.</p> <p><strong>Brian Maidment</strong> is Emeritus Professor of the History of Print at Liverpool John Moores University. His most recent books are <em>Comedy, Caricature and the Social Order, 1820–1850</em> (2013) and <em>Robert Seymour and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture</em> (2021). He is currently writing about cheap comic lithographs from the 1830s.</p> <p><strong>Matt Poland</strong> is a Lecturer at the University of Washington in Seattle and the assistant editor of <em>MLQ: A Journal of Literary History</em>. He writes and teaches about the global circulation and remediation of Victorian literature, settler colonialism, archives and the history of English studies, and anti-racist pedagogy. He has work forthcoming in Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom, and his writing has appeared in <em>Journal of Victorian Culture, George Eliot–George Henry Lewes Studies, Review19</em>, and elsewhere. He is also a contributing editor to At the Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837–1901.</p> <p><strong>Michelle Prain-Brice</strong> is Professor of Literature at Adolfo...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44337,"journal":{"name":"Victorian Periodicals Review","volume":"19 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Biographies\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/vpr.2023.a937160\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Biographies <!-- /html_title --></li> </ul> <p><strong>Lars Atkin</strong> is a Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Kent. They are codirector of the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies and coeditor of the Curran Index. Their most recent monograph, <em>Writing the South African San: Colonial Ethnographic Discourses</em> (Palgrave, 2021) examined the entanglement between literature and ethnography in nineteenth-century representations of South African Indigenous people. They are coinvestigator on the AHRC-funded \\\"Victorian Diversities\\\" network.</p> <p><strong>Stephen Basdeo</strong>, Senior Lecturer in History at the Elizabeth School, London, wrote the first biography of G. W. M. Reynolds, <em>Victorian England's Best-Selling Author: The Revolutionary Life of G. W. M. Reynolds</em> (2022), as well as biographies of Joseph Ritson and Wat Tyler. His current project, <em>Mysteries of the People, Mysteries of the World</em>, examines nineteenth-century \\\"mysteries\\\" from Europe, the Americas, and Australia.</p> <p><strong>Caroline Bressey</strong> is Professor of Historical Geography in the Department of Geography, University College London. Her research focuses upon the Black presence in Victorian England, especially London, alongside Victorian anti-racism communities and the links between contemporary identities and the diverse histories of London as represented in heritage sites and museums. She won the Colby Scholarly Book Prize for her first monograph, <em>Empire, Race and the Politics of Anti-Caste</em> (2013), which examined the anti-racist reading community established by Catherine Impey and Celestine Edwards. Her current research project maps the everyday of multiethnic working-class communities of Victorian England.</p> <p><strong>Porscha Fermanis</strong> is Professor of Romantic Literature at University College Dublin. Her latest books are <em>Romantic Pasts: History, Fiction and Feeling in Britain, 1790–1850</em> (2022) and <em>Worlding the South: Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture and the Southern Settler Colonies</em> (coedited with Sarah Comyn, 2021). She is currently completing a monograph entitled <em>Southern Settler Fiction and the Transcolonial Imaginary, 1820–1890</em>.</p> <p><strong>Ryan D. Fong</strong> is an Associate Professor of English at Kalamazoo College. He is completing his first monograph, <em>Unsettling: Indigenous Literatures and the Work of Victorian Studies</em>, which is under contract with SUNY Press. Ryan has published essays in <em>Victorian Studies, Victorian Literature and Culture</em>, and <em>Nineteenth Century Gender Studies</em> and is one of the founding organizers of the digital humanities project Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom.</p> <p><strong>Jennifer Hayward</strong> is Professor of Literature at the Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (Chile) and Virginia Myers Professor of English and Global Media and Digital Studies at the College of Wooster (United States). Her publications include <em>Consuming Pleasures: Active Audiences and Serial Fictions</em> (1997); new editions of Maria Graham's 1824 <em>Journal of a Residence in Chile</em> (2003) and <em>Journal of a Voyage to Brazil</em> (2011); and essays on the British periodical press in Chile. With Michelle Prain-Brice, she codirects Anglophone Chile, a digitization project that has received generous assistance from the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals Field Development Grant (2018) and the Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library (2023).</p> <p><strong>Jenna M. Herdman</strong> completed her PhD at Carleton University (Ottawa, Canada) in 2023. Her research explores the intersection of midcentury Victorian print culture, book history, and the digital humanities, with a particular focus on digital scholarly editing of nineteenth-century print culture texts. Her work has been published in <em>Victorian Periodicals Review, Book History</em>, and the <em>Journal of Victorian Culture</em>. She works as a public servant for the federal government of Canada.</p> <p><strong>Brian Maidment</strong> is Emeritus Professor of the History of Print at Liverpool John Moores University. His most recent books are <em>Comedy, Caricature and the Social Order, 1820–1850</em> (2013) and <em>Robert Seymour and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture</em> (2021). He is currently writing about cheap comic lithographs from the 1830s.</p> <p><strong>Matt Poland</strong> is a Lecturer at the University of Washington in Seattle and the assistant editor of <em>MLQ: A Journal of Literary History</em>. He writes and teaches about the global circulation and remediation of Victorian literature, settler colonialism, archives and the history of English studies, and anti-racist pedagogy. He has work forthcoming in Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom, and his writing has appeared in <em>Journal of Victorian Culture, George Eliot–George Henry Lewes Studies, Review19</em>, and elsewhere. He is also a contributing editor to At the Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837–1901.</p> <p><strong>Michelle Prain-Brice</strong> is Professor of Literature at Adolfo...</p> </p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":44337,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Victorian Periodicals Review\",\"volume\":\"19 1\",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.3000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-09-13\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Victorian Periodicals Review\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2023.a937160\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Victorian Periodicals Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2023.a937160","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 传记 拉尔斯-阿特金(Lars Atkin)是肯特大学维多利亚文学讲师。他们是土著和殖民定居者研究中心的共同主任,也是《库兰索引》的共同编辑。他们最近的专著是《书写南非鄯族》(Writing the South African San:殖民地人种学论述》(Palgrave,2021 年)研究了十九世纪南非土著人的文学和人种学之间的纠葛。他们是 AHRC 资助的 "维多利亚多样性 "网络的共同研究员。伦敦伊丽莎白学院历史学高级讲师斯蒂芬-巴斯迪奥撰写了维多利亚时代英国最畅销作家 G. W. M. 雷诺兹的首部传记:雷诺兹的革命生涯》(2022 年),以及约瑟夫-里森和瓦特-泰勒的传记。他目前的项目《人民的奥秘,世界的奥秘》研究欧洲、美洲和澳大利亚十九世纪的 "奥秘"。Caroline Bressey 是伦敦大学学院地理系历史地理学教授。她的研究重点是维多利亚时期英国(尤其是伦敦)的黑人存在,以及维多利亚时期的反种族主义社区和当代身份与遗产地和博物馆所代表的伦敦不同历史之间的联系。她的第一部专著《帝国、种族和反种姓政治》(2013 年)获得了科尔比学术图书奖,该书研究了凯瑟琳-英佩(Catherine Impey)和塞莱斯廷-爱德华兹(Celestine Edwards)建立的反种族主义阅读社区。她目前的研究项目描绘了维多利亚时代英国多民族工人阶级社区的日常生活。Porscha Fermanis 是都柏林大学学院浪漫主义文学教授。她的最新著作有《浪漫往事:1790-1850 年英国的历史、小说和情感》(2022 年)和《南方的世界》:十九世纪文学文化与南方移民殖民地》(与 Sarah Comyn 合编,2021 年)。她目前正在完成一部名为《1820-1890 年南方移民小说与跨殖民想象》的专著。Ryan D. Fong 是卡拉马祖学院英语系副教授。他正在完成他的第一部专著《Unsettling:他的第一部专著《Unsettling:Indigenous Literatures and the Work of Victorian Studies》已与纽约州立大学出版社签约。Ryan 曾在《维多利亚研究》、《维多利亚文学与文化》和《19 世纪性别研究》等杂志上发表文章,是数字人文项目 "维多利亚课堂"(Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom)的创始组织者之一。詹妮弗-海沃德(Jennifer Hayward)是智利阿道夫-伊瓦涅斯大学(Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez)文学教授,也是美国伍斯特学院(College of Wooster)英语和全球媒体与数字研究弗吉尼亚-迈尔斯教授。她的著作包括《消费乐趣》(Consuming Pleasures):Active Audiences and Serial Fictions》(1997 年);Maria Graham 的 1824 年 Journal of a Residence in Chile(2003 年)和 Journal of a Voyage to Brazil(2011 年)的新版本;以及关于智利英国期刊媒体的论文。她与米歇尔-普莱恩-布莱斯(Michelle Prain-Brice)共同领导着 "讲英语的智利"(Anglophone Chile)数字化项目,该项目得到了维多利亚时期期刊研究协会(Research Society for Victorian Periodicals Field Development Grant)(2018 年)和大英图书馆濒危档案计划(Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library)(2023 年)的慷慨援助。珍娜-M-赫德曼于 2023 年在卡尔顿大学(加拿大渥太华)完成博士学位。她的研究探索了中世纪维多利亚印刷文化、图书史和数字人文的交叉点,尤其侧重于十九世纪印刷文化文本的数字学术编辑。她的作品发表在《维多利亚期刊评论》、《图书史》和《维多利亚文化期刊》上。她是加拿大联邦政府的公务员。布莱恩-迈德门特是利物浦约翰摩尔斯大学印刷史荣誉教授。他最近的著作有《喜剧、漫画与社会秩序,1820-1850 年》(2013 年)和《罗伯特-西摩与 19 世纪印刷文化》(2021 年)。他目前正在撰写关于 19 世纪 30 年代廉价漫画石版画的文章。马特-波兰是西雅图华盛顿大学的讲师,也是《MLQ:文学史杂志》的助理编辑。他的著作和教学内容涉及维多利亚时期文学的全球流通和补救、殖民定居主义、档案和英语研究史以及反种族主义教学法。他的作品即将发表在《维多利亚课堂的涣散》(Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom)一书中,他的文章曾发表在《维多利亚文化期刊》(Journal of Victorian Culture)、《乔治-艾略特-乔治-亨利-卢斯研究》(George Eliot-George Henry Lewes Studies)、《Review19》等刊物上。他还是《流通图书馆》(At the Circulating Library)的特约编辑:A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837-1901.米歇尔-普莱恩-布莱斯是阿道弗大学(Adolfo...
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Biographies
Lars Atkin is a Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Kent. They are codirector of the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies and coeditor of the Curran Index. Their most recent monograph, Writing the South African San: Colonial Ethnographic Discourses (Palgrave, 2021) examined the entanglement between literature and ethnography in nineteenth-century representations of South African Indigenous people. They are coinvestigator on the AHRC-funded "Victorian Diversities" network.
Stephen Basdeo, Senior Lecturer in History at the Elizabeth School, London, wrote the first biography of G. W. M. Reynolds, Victorian England's Best-Selling Author: The Revolutionary Life of G. W. M. Reynolds (2022), as well as biographies of Joseph Ritson and Wat Tyler. His current project, Mysteries of the People, Mysteries of the World, examines nineteenth-century "mysteries" from Europe, the Americas, and Australia.
Caroline Bressey is Professor of Historical Geography in the Department of Geography, University College London. Her research focuses upon the Black presence in Victorian England, especially London, alongside Victorian anti-racism communities and the links between contemporary identities and the diverse histories of London as represented in heritage sites and museums. She won the Colby Scholarly Book Prize for her first monograph, Empire, Race and the Politics of Anti-Caste (2013), which examined the anti-racist reading community established by Catherine Impey and Celestine Edwards. Her current research project maps the everyday of multiethnic working-class communities of Victorian England.
Porscha Fermanis is Professor of Romantic Literature at University College Dublin. Her latest books are Romantic Pasts: History, Fiction and Feeling in Britain, 1790–1850 (2022) and Worlding the South: Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture and the Southern Settler Colonies (coedited with Sarah Comyn, 2021). She is currently completing a monograph entitled Southern Settler Fiction and the Transcolonial Imaginary, 1820–1890.
Ryan D. Fong is an Associate Professor of English at Kalamazoo College. He is completing his first monograph, Unsettling: Indigenous Literatures and the Work of Victorian Studies, which is under contract with SUNY Press. Ryan has published essays in Victorian Studies, Victorian Literature and Culture, and Nineteenth Century Gender Studies and is one of the founding organizers of the digital humanities project Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom.
Jennifer Hayward is Professor of Literature at the Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (Chile) and Virginia Myers Professor of English and Global Media and Digital Studies at the College of Wooster (United States). Her publications include Consuming Pleasures: Active Audiences and Serial Fictions (1997); new editions of Maria Graham's 1824 Journal of a Residence in Chile (2003) and Journal of a Voyage to Brazil (2011); and essays on the British periodical press in Chile. With Michelle Prain-Brice, she codirects Anglophone Chile, a digitization project that has received generous assistance from the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals Field Development Grant (2018) and the Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library (2023).
Jenna M. Herdman completed her PhD at Carleton University (Ottawa, Canada) in 2023. Her research explores the intersection of midcentury Victorian print culture, book history, and the digital humanities, with a particular focus on digital scholarly editing of nineteenth-century print culture texts. Her work has been published in Victorian Periodicals Review, Book History, and the Journal of Victorian Culture. She works as a public servant for the federal government of Canada.
Brian Maidment is Emeritus Professor of the History of Print at Liverpool John Moores University. His most recent books are Comedy, Caricature and the Social Order, 1820–1850 (2013) and Robert Seymour and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture (2021). He is currently writing about cheap comic lithographs from the 1830s.
Matt Poland is a Lecturer at the University of Washington in Seattle and the assistant editor of MLQ: A Journal of Literary History. He writes and teaches about the global circulation and remediation of Victorian literature, settler colonialism, archives and the history of English studies, and anti-racist pedagogy. He has work forthcoming in Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom, and his writing has appeared in Journal of Victorian Culture, George Eliot–George Henry Lewes Studies, Review19, and elsewhere. He is also a contributing editor to At the Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837–1901.
Michelle Prain-Brice is Professor of Literature at Adolfo...