English & Comparative Literary Studies News
Funded three-year PhD studentship available
As part of a project funded by the Leverhulme Trust on ‘Oriental poetry, Latin scholarship and the European Enlightenment: The case of William Jones’, a three-year PhD studentship will be available from 1 October 2016 in the Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick. The studentship will cover university fees and maintenance at the current rates for eligible Home or EU students.
Supervised by Dr John Gilmore, the student will complete a thesis within the field of European receptions of Oriental literature c. 1750-1850, with a focus on translations into Latin. The student will also participate in other activities attached to the research project, including conferences, and work alongside a team of researchers including Dr Stefano Pellò (Università Ca’ Foscari, Venice). Applicants will have a background in Classics and/or Comparative Literary Studies, including a good first degree and a master’s degree, and a good reading knowledge of Latin is required. A prior knowledge of, or a demonstrable willingness to learn, a relevant non-European language (which might include, but would not be limited to, one of the following: Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Sanskrit, Chinese) would be an advantage. A prior demonstrable interest in an aspect of Neo-Latin or Classical Reception Studies would also be an advantage.
Potential applicants are encouraged to contact Dr Gilmore directly at J.T.Gilmore@warwick.ac.uk. Proposals need not relate specifically to the work of Sir William Jones, but must be relevant to the general field of the research project, as indicated above. Applicants should send a cover letter outlining their suitability for the studentship, a CV and a writing sample via email to Dr Gilmore. Applicants should furthermore arrange for two academic references to be sent by email to Dr Gilmore at the same email address. The deadline for all application materials is 16 September 2016.
British Academy Leverhulme Trust grant for Prof Emma Mason
Prof Emma Mason has been awarded a British Academy/Leverhulme Trust small research grant to support her symposium on the poet Elizabeth Jennings in October.
AL Kennedy longlisted for Man Booker Prize
Congratulations to AL Kennedy, Associate Professor in the Writing Programme, on the longlisting of her most recent novel, Serious Sweet, for the Man Booker Prize 2016. Reviews include The Observer, The Spectator and the Financial Times. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and was twice included in the Granta Best of Young British Novelists list. She has won awards including the 2007 Costa Book Award and the Austrian State Prize for International Literature. Her professional website is here.
Shakespeare Race and Performance: The Diverse Bard
Congratulations to Dr Jami Rogers (Research Assistant, Multicultural Shakespeare, and Act for Change Committee) and Sita Thomas (PhD student) on their essays in Shakespeare Race and Performance: The Diverse Bard, published this week by Routledge. The collection is edited by Dr Delia Jarrett-Macauley, formerly a postdoctoral fellow with the Multicultural Shakespeare Project (2013-15).
Sarah Moss, The Tidal Zone
Congratulations to Sarah Moss on the publication of her most recent novel, The Tidal Zone (Granta 2016), which has been widely reviewed.