Journals
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Byron Journal
In 1973, the Byron Society started the Byron Journal, which is published twice a year, and which all members receive free.
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Essays in Romanticism
Published by the International Conference on Romanticism, Essays in Romanticism (formerly Prism(s): Essays in Romanticism) is the first scholarly journal specifically devoted to the interdisciplinary and cross-linguistic study of Romanticism.
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European Romantic Review
European Romantic Review (ERR) is published six times per year and is dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of literature, history, philosophy and art. Each year, it publishes a NASSR Conference Issue. All NASSR members receive ERR as one of the benefits of membership.
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The Keats-Shelley Review
Published by the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association, The Keats-Shelley Review is published biannually.
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Nineteenth-Century Studies
Published by the Nineteenth Century Studies Association, Nineteenth-Century Studies is an interdisciplinary scholarly journal published annually.
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Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net
Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net (RaVoN) is an International e-Journal devoted to British Nineteenth-Century Literature (ISSN 1916-1441). The journal was founded by Michael Eberle-Sinatra as Romanticism on the Net in February 1996. It expanded its scope in August 2007 to include Victorian literature.
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Romantic Circles Praxis Series
The Romantic Circles Praxis Series (RCPS) is devoted to using computer technologies to investigate critically the languages, cultures, histories, and theories of Romanticism. RCPS is committed to mapping out this terrain with the best and most exciting critical writing of contemporary Romanticist scholarship.
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Studies in Romanticism
Studies in Romanticism was founded in 1961 by David Bonnell Green at a time when it was still possible to wonder whether “romanticism” was a term worth theorizing (as Morse Peckham deliberated in the first essay of the first number). It seemed that it was, and, ever since, SiR (as it is known to abbreviation) has flourished under a fine succession of editors: Edwin Silverman, W. H. Stevenson, Charles Stone III, Michael Cooke, Morton Paley, David Wagenknecht (1978-2010), and Charles Rzepka.
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The Wordsworth Circle
The Wordsworth Circle is an international quarterly learned journal founded in 1970 to publish contemporary studies of literature, culture, and society primarily in England during the Romantic period from about 1760 to 1850. Directed toward scholars, critics, and students, it focuses on the lives, works and times of such writers as Wordsworth, Coleridge, Blake, Hazlitt, DeQuincey, Lamb, Southey, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Scott, Jane Austen, minor and popular writers such as Beattie, Maria Edgeworth , Leigh Hunt, John Clare, and James Hogg.