Textual Studies
The
Centre for Textual Studies within 51Âþ»’s
Institute of English is devoted to scholarly research in the fields of textual studies and history of the book, and to the emerging technologies that support them. These fields include bibliographies, textual criticism, scholarly editing, genetic criticism, adaptation studies, the sociology of bibliography and texts, book history and periodical studies. We encourage research that draws on advanced electronic technologies for research and presentation. The CTS's expertise runs from medieval manuscripts through the early printed book period into the steam press and hot-metal periods and ends with the latest digital editions. To read more about our work, click
here.
The Centre for Textual Studies at 51Âþ» invites applications to the Midlands4Cities Doctoral Training Partnership. Members of the centre and their research interests are listed below.
Contacts
Professor Gabriel Egan, Professor of Shakespeare Studies, Director of the Institute of English, Director of the Centre for Textual Studies
gegan@dmu.ac.uk
Shakespeare, early printing, manuscripts, theatre history, cultural theory, digital methods.
Professor Tim Fulford, Professor of English
tfulford@dmu.ac.uk
Romanticism, eighteenth-century literature, literature and colonialism, literature and science, Robert Southey, Robert Bloomfield.
Dr Takako Kato
tkato@dmu.ac.uk
Manuscript production and culture, digital methods, Caxton’s printshop, Chaucer, Malory.
Professor Siobhan Keenan, Professor of Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature
skeenan@dmu.ac.uk
Shakespeare and early modern drama, theatre history, early modern women’s writing, scholarly editing.
Professor Joe Phelan, Professor of Nineteenth-Century Literature
JPhelan@dmu.ac.uk
Nineteenth-century poetry, metre and poetic form, colonial writing, Anglo-Italian and Anglo-French literary and cultural relations.
Dr Alice Wood
alice.wood@dmu.ac.uk
Twentieth-century literature, Modernism, Women’s magazines, Virginia Woolf.
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