Research projects

Our researchers are engaged in re-discovering authors, challenging the literary canon and bringing new approaches to bear on established texts.

Networks of Association & Intimacy: The Legacies & Letters of Harriet Shaw Weaver & Sylvia Beach

Based on recent research in Princeton, Clare Hutton is currently writing a long essay on ‘The Legacies and Letters of Harriet Shaw Weaver and Sylvia Beach’.  This builds on ‘’ and explores the correspondence which passed between two of Joyce’s female publishers, Harriet Shaw Weaver and Sylvia Beach from 1920 to 1961.  These letters tell a rich and detailed story of female friendship, and reflect an unusual perspective on Joyce’s life.  In close reading this record, the aim is to establish the basis for a different kind of biography, one which is feminist and nuanced, and which appraises the significance of women working behind the scenes. 

Form and Modernity in Women’s Poetry, 1895–1922

Sarah Parker has recently published a new book entitled . The book transforms current understandings of twentieth-century poetry by attending to the work of women poets Alice Meynell, Michael Field (Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper), Dollie Radford, and Katharine Tynan. While mainly associated with the late nineteenth century, Sarah’s work shows that these poets were highly active in the early twentieth century and, far from being uninterested in modernity, used their poetry to address contemporary concerns, including suffrage, sexuality, motherhood, and the First World War.

Reading Social Networks in James Joyce’s Library

Based on her doctoral research, Emily Bell is currently developing a paper on affective and emotional networks evidenced in James Joyce’s library. Using his correspondence, Emily’s work remodels Joyce’s reading practice by looking at the emotional ties that connected Joyce to his reading materials and to his readers. This research helps us understand how reading tasks were delegated and distributed among family, friends and helpers both near and far.

a mother holding a toddler wearing a red shirt

Help: Gender, Care, and Outsourcing in Contemporary Literature

Throughout our lives other people help us give birth, look after our children, clean our workplaces or houses, and attend to us when we are ill, ageing, and dying. Jennifer Cooke has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to examine how contemporary literature gives voice and narrative agency to the experiences of undervalued workers to whom we outsource care and domestic labour.

The research focuses upon the representation of five figures who can be hired to help, from the beginnings of life until its end: the surrogate, nanny, cleaner, nurse, and the carer. Care is a pressing societal concern with transnational implications, since many care roles are undertaken by migrant workers. This project offers timely arguments for revaluing outsourced care and domestic labour and for contemporary literature’s powerful attention to those workers upon whom we rely. It builds upon , published in her co-edited collection, . The result will be her third monograph.