Many thanks to the program committee and organizers, and to the NASSR executive for a fantastic #NASSR2025!
Many thanks to the program committee and organizers, and to the NASSR executive for a fantastic #NASSR2025!
Excellent paper by Paris Weber to conclude a fabulous #NASSR2025 on Thomas Gray's representation of nature as integral to the perception of time's flow and human memory in his #EtonOde and #Elegy, drawing a connection from Burnet to Hardy.
Big shout-out to the fabulous panel on "Global Romanticisms" at #NASSR2025! Insightful discussions and inspiring perspectives on Late Colonial Romanticisms in India, Juliusz Slowacki and Melville's _Moby Dick_, and Shelley and Xu Zhimo’s Love Poems!
Exciting #NASSR2025 paper by Tara Lee on digitally mapping the world of Romantic epic. The project draws on a dataset of 230 epics (1787-1837) and employs topic modelling to explore the corpus' semantic space as well as its genre geography.
Excited about day 3 of #NASSR2025! Looking forward to "Romanticism &/as World Literature", "Global Romanticisms", and "Word & Image Poetics/The Natural World".
Fabulous #NASSR2025 paper by Stephen Webb on reconstructing Byron's Library, drawing on (and enriching) sales catalogues metadata, and applying the resulting networks to analyse intertextuality in _Don Juan_.
Excited to be attending the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (#NASSR)'s 2025 conference "Romanticism's Commons".
Conference website: https://landing.athabascau.ca/pages/view/23452548/romanticism%E2%80%99s-commons-nassrs-2025-conference-online