BOOKS

Coleridge and the Romantic Newspaper: The Morning Post and the Road to Dejection. Basingstoke: Palgrave UK, 2016. xii+274 pp.  http://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319319773

EDITED BOOKS

Maria Edgeworth’s The Absentee. Penguin Classics, UK, 2000. xxx+278 pp. Reissued in 2006.

Volume V of The Novels and Selected Works of Maria Edgeworth [The Absentee, Émilie de Coulange, Madame de Fleury]. Gen. ed. Marilyn Butler et al. With Kim Walker and Marilyn Butler. London, Pickering and Chatto, 1999. xlii+355 pp. [Van de Veire]

EDITED JOURNALS

Transporting Romanticism, a special issue of Romanticism. Forthcoming 2018.

Romantic Wonder, a special issue of Romanticism Vol 18, No 3, October 2012.

De Verwondering, a special issue of DW B, co-edited with Jan Lauwereyns, Vol 157, No 3, June 2012. [in Dutch]

ARTICLES AND CHAPTERS

Fanny Brawne and Other Women. John Keats in Context. Ed Michael O’Neill. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017. Pp 38-46.

‘Poets had moved in this country once’: John Mulgan and Romantic Poetry. Journal of New Zealand Studies No 21, December 2015, pp 13-18.

The Importance of Other People and the Transmission of Affect in Wordsworth’s Poetry. Modern Language Review Vol 110, No 4, October 2015, pp 969-991.

A Perfect Storm: The Nature of Consciousness on Wordsworth’s Salisbury Plain. English Studies Vol 96, No 5, July 2015, pp 525-540.

Wordsworth’s ‘Song for the Wandering Jew’ as a Poem for Coleridge. Romanticism Vol 21, No 1, April 2015, pp 37-47.

A Perfect Storm: The Nature of Consciousness on Salisbury Plain. Grasmere, 2013: Selected Papers from the Wordsworth Summer Conference.  Ed. Richard Gravil.  Penrith: The Wordsworth Conference Foundation, 2013. Humanities-Ebooks. Pp 8-28.

LN-lezersessay: De willekeur van de blauwe hemel: Jan Lauwereyns lezen. Literair Nederland. 15 March 2013. 3184 words. [in Dutch] http://www.literairnederland.nl/2013/03/15/ln-essay-de-willekeur-van-de-blauwe-hemel-jan-lauwereyns-lezen/

The Integral Significance of the 1816 Preface to Kubla Khan. Coleridge, Romanticism, and the Orient: Cultural Negotiations. Eds. Kaz Oishi, Seamus Perry, David Vallins. London and New York: Continuum, 2013. Pp 165-176.

The Lyric Power of Connection in Wordsworth’s ‘Poem on the Wye’ and W. H. Auden’s ‘In Praise of Limestone’. Grasmere, 2012: Selected Papers from the Wordsworth Summer Conference. Ed. Richard Gravil. Penrith: The Wordsworth Conference Foundation, 2012. Humanities-Ebooks. Pp 104-112.

Transporting English Romanticism to the Colonies: Alexander Turnbull, Coleridge’s Prospectus to The Friend, and Richard Horne’s Copy of Hazlitt’s Book. Co-authored with Ruth Lightbourne. Romanticism Vol 18, No 3, October 2012, pp 281-293.

Introduction: Romantic Wonder. Romanticism Vol 18, No 3, October 2012, pp 225-226. [in Dutch]

Sparagmos: een poëtica van Hans Faverey. DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012, pp 357-364. [in Dutch]

A Love Story of Books and Libraries . DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012. Online.

http://www.dwb.be/uitgave/2012/3/de-verwondering/heidi-thomson/alleen-online-love-story-books-and-libraries-part-one

http://www.dwb.be/uitgave/2012/3/de-verwondering/heidi-thomson/alleen-online-love-story-books-and-libraries-part-two

Regenbogen en verwondering: hoe Keats te lezen? DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012, pp 371-382. [in Dutch]

Geen ademtocht verspild. Co-authored with Richard Powers. DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012, pp 471-488. [in Dutch]

Not a Breath Wasted. Co-authored with Richard Powers. DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012. Online.

http://www.dwb.be/uitgave/2012/3/de-verwondering/heidi-thomson/alleen-online-not-breath-wasted

http://www.dwb.be/uitgave/2012/3/de-verwondering/heidi-thomson/alleen-online-not-breath-wasted-part-two

http://www.dwb.be/uitgave/2012/3/de-verwondering/heidi-thomson/alleen-online-not-breath-wasted-part-three

Mooie doden. Co-authored with Jan Lauwereyns, drawings by Rachel Wu. DW B Vol 157, No 3, June 2012, pp 343-356. [in Dutch]

Gegroet, goede lezer. Co-authored with Jan Lauwereyns. DW BVol 157, No 3, June 2012, pp 339-341. [in Dutch]

Webs of Interlocution: Interaction with Others in Wordsworth and Auden. Romantic Presences in the Twentieth Century. Ed. Mark Sandy. Basingstoke: Ashgate, 2012. Pp 89-104.

Keats’s Letters: ‘A Wilful and Dramatic Exercise of Our Minds Towards each Other’. The Keats-Shelley Review Vol 25, No 2, September 2011, pp 160-174.

We bewegen onze ogen niet en we zien. DW B 2011/3, June 2011, pp 401-407. Co-authored with Jan Lauwereyns. Transl. Els van de Perre.

Remembering and Forgetting – Herinneren en Vergeten. Running, Writing, Robinson. Eds. David Carnegie, Paul Millar, David Norton, Harry Ricketts. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2011. Pp 147-155. [not quality assured; liber amicorum]

The Poet and the Publisher in Thomas Gray’s Correspondence. The Yearbook of English Studies Vol 28, 1998, pp 163-180. Reprinted in Book Publishing. Ed. John Feather. London: Routledge, 2011.  

Thomas Gray, 1716-1771, Bibliography. The Thomas Gray Archive. Ed. Alexander Huber. University of Oxford. Uploaded September 2010. Online

<http://www.thomasgray.org/materials/thomsonbib.shtml>

The Editor’s Subject: William Mason’s Construction of Thomas Gray. Books and Bibliography: Essays in Commemoration of Don McKenzie. Ed. John Thomson. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2002. Pp 103-115. Reprinted in Literature Criticism from 1400 to 1800. Ed. Tom Schoenberg. Gale, 2010.

Women Poets of the Romantic Period: Barbauld to Landon. Chapter 30 in The Cambridge History of English Poetry. Ed. Michael O’Neill. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Pp 561-575.

The Construction of William Wordsworth in Sara Coleridge’s 1847 Edition of Biographia Literaria. Grasmere, 2009: Selected Papers from the Wordsworth Summer Conference. Ed. Richard Gravil. Penrith: The Wordsworth Conference Foundation, 2009. Humanities-Ebooks.co.uk. Pp 117-131.

‘Merely the Emptying out of my Desk’: Coleridge about Wordsworth in the Morning Post of 1802. Coleridge Bulletin No. 31 (NS), Summer 2008, pp 73-89.  

A Connection between Chatterton and Wordsworth in two Coleridge Poems.  Rewriting the Long Eighteenth Century: Selected Proceedings of the XIIIth David Nichol Smith Seminar, eds. Jocelyn Harris and Shef Rogers. Special Issue of Eighteenth-Century Life Vol. 32, No.2 (2008), pp 110-119.

‘O Friend! O Teacher! God’s great Gift to me!’: Coleridge about Wordsworth. Still Shines When You Think Of It: A Festschrift for Vincent O’Sullivan. Eds. Bill Manhire and Peter Whiteford. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2007. Pp 118-130.

The Publication of Coleridge’s ‘Dejection: An Ode’ in the Morning Post. Paradise: New Worlds of Books and Readers. Special Issue of Script & Print: Bulletin of the Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand Vol 29, 2005 [2007], pp 298-310.]

‘The fashion not to be an Absentee’: Fashion and Moral Authority in Edgeworth’s Tales.  An Uncomfortable Authority: Maria Edgeworth and Her Contexts. Eds. Chris Fauske and Heidi Kaufman. Newark, University of Delaware Press, 2004. Pp 165-191.

Teaching Keats’s ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ in New Zealand. ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’: Hypercanonicity and Pedagogy. Ed. James O’Rourke. Romantic Circles Praxis series edited by Orrin Wang and John Morillo. http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/grecianurn. October 2003.  

The Editor’s Subject: William Mason’s Construction of Thomas Gray. Books and Bibliography: Essays in Commemoration of Don McKenzie. Ed. John Thomson.  Wellington, Victoria University Press, 2002.  Pp 103-115. Reprinted in Literature Criticism from 1400 to 1800. Ed. Tom Schoenberg. Gale, 2010.

‘We Are Two’: The Address to Dorothy in ‘Tintern Abbey’. Studies in Romanticism Vol 40, No 4, Winter 2001, pp 531-546.

Eavesdropping on ‘The Eve of St. Agnes’: Madeline’s Sensual Ear and Porphyro’s Ancient Ditty.  Journal of English and Germanic Philology Vol 97, No 3, July 1998, pp 337-351.

The Poet and the Publisher in Thomas Gray’s Correspondence. The Yearbook of English Studies Vol 28, 1998, pp 163-180. Reprinted in Book Publishing. Ed. John Feather. London: Routledge, 2011.

In Search of the Unknown South-Land: Abel Tasman and New Zealand. The Low Countries: Arts and Society in Flanders and the Netherlands. A Yearbook. 1996-1997. Vol 4, 1996, pp 198-205. [Van de Veire]  

An Ironic Reading of Wordsworth’s ‘Ode to Duty’. AUMLA: Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association No 75, 1991, pp 82-96. [Van de Veire]  

The Ordering of Vision in Collins’s ‘Ode on the Poetical Character’. Essays in Literature Vol 15, 1988, pp 165-175. [Van de Veire]

William Carlos Williams en Pieter Brueghel: Twee Geestesgenoten. Yang No 116, March 1984, pp 63-68. [Van de Veire] [in Dutch]

SHORT ACADEMIC ARTICLES AND NOTES

Coleridge’s Ad Vilmum Axiologum and Schiller’s Musen-Almanach für das Jahr 1797. Notes and Queries Vol 63, No 2, June 2016, pp 228-230.

‘Beyond her own knowledge’ in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Notes and Queries Vol 62, No 3, September 2015, p 401.

Coleridge’s ‘On a Supposed Son’ and Friedrich von Logau’s ‘Auf ein Zweifelkind’. Notes and Queries Vol 61, No 1, March 2014, pp 58-61.

Jan Lauwereyns. Authorized Author’s Note. [In English and Dutch]. Poetry International 2012. In print and online.

http://www.poetryinternationalweb.net/pi/site/poet/item/6178

Coleridge’s Notes from Christian Heinrich Spiess’s Biographien der Selbstmörder. Notes and Queries Vol 59, No 3, September 2012, pp 375-378.

Sara Coleridge’s Annotation in Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children. Notes and Queries Vol 58, No 4, December 2011, pp 548-549.

Evaluative abstracts in the Routledge Annotated Bibliography of English Studies:

Contribution on Stephen Gill, The Cambridge Companion to Wordsworth (Cambridge University Press, 2003). 2009.

Contribution on Grant F. Scott, “Sacred Relics: A Discovery of New Severn Letters” (European Romantic Review Vol. 16, No. 3, 2005). 2009.

Contribution on Charles J. Rzepka, “’Cortez – or Balboa, or Somebody Like That’: Form, Fact and Forgetting in Keats’s ‘Chapman’s Homer’ Sonnet” (Keats-Shelley Journal Vol. 51, 2002). 2009.

Contribution on Helen Regueiro and Frances Ferguson, eds. The Wordsworthian Enlightenment: Romantic Poetry and the Ecology of Reading (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005). 2009.

Contribution on Richard Marggraf-Turley, Keats’s Boyish Imagination (Routledge, 2004). 2009.

Entry on Maria Edgeworth. Nineteenth-Century British women Writers. Ed. Abigail Burnham Bloom. London, Greenwood Press, 2000. Pp 157-160.

A Note on Maria Edgeworth and Ursula Bethell. Kotare: New Zealand Notes & Queries Vol 2, No 1, 1999, pp 46-47.  

Entries on ‘Elizabeth Knox’ (p 288), ‘Elizabeth Nannestad’ (p 391), ‘Renée’ (pp 464-465), ‘Abel Tasman’ (pp 526-527), ‘The Netherlands’ (p 393). The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature. Eds. Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie. Oxford. Oxford University Press, 1998.  

A Note on Mary Leapor’s Reputation. Notes and Queries Vol 242, No 2, 1997, pp 205-206. [Van de Veire]

Entries on ‘Autobiography and Confession’ (pp 18-20) and ‘Benjamin Robert Haydon’ (pp 248-249).  Encyclopedia of Romanticism. Ed. Laura Dabundo. New York, Garland, 1992. [Van de Veire]

A Note on Gray’s ‘Adversity’. Notes and Queries Vol 235, No 3, 1990, pp 309-312. [Van de Veire]

ACADEMIC REVIEWS

Review of Publishing, Editing, and Reception: Essays in Honor of Donald H. Reiman edited by Michael Edson. Notes and Queries Vol 64, No 1, March 2017, pp 192-193.

Review of Unusual Suspects: Pitt’s Reign of Alarm and the Lost Generation of the 1790s by Kenneth R. Johnston. Notes and Queries Vol 63, No 3, September 2016, pp 488-489.

Review of Constructing Coleridge: The Posthumous Life of the Author by Alan D. Vardy. Romanticism Vol 19, No 1, April 2013, pp 100-101.

Review of Wordsworth’s Revisitings by Stephen Gill. Modern Language Review Vol 107, No 3, 2012, pp 925-926.

Review of Mary Shelley by Graham Allen. The Keats-Shelley Review Vol 25, No 1, 2011, pp 88-90.

Review of The Romantic Legacy of Paradise Lost by Jonathon Shears. Modern Language Review Vol 105, No 3, 2010, pp 848-849.

Review of Coleridge and the Fine Arts by Morton Paley. Modern Language Review Vol 104, No 4, 2009, pp 1120-1121.

Review of The All-Sustaining Air: Romantic Legacies and Renewals in British, American, and Irish Poetry since 1900 by Michael O'Neill. Modern Language Review Vol 104, No 1, 2009, pp 190-191.

Review of The Friendship: Wordsworth and Coleridge by Adam Sisman. Coleridge Bulletin No 30 (NS), Winter 2007, pp 51-55.

Review of Endymion and the Labyrinthian Path to Eminence in Art by Christoph Loreck. Keats-Shelley Journal Vol 56, 2007, pp 206-207.

Review of Erotic Coleridge: Women, Love, and the Law against Divorce by Anya Taylor.  Romanticism on the Net No 46, May 2007. Online. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ron/2007/v/n46/016145ar.html

Review of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Seamus Perry. Coleridge Bulletin No 26 (NS), Winter 2005, pp 79-84.

Review of Mary Wollstonecraft and the Feminist Imagination by Barbara Taylor. Modern Language Review Vol 100, No 3, 2005, pp 789-790.

Review of Thomas Gray’s Journal of his Visit to the Lake District in October 1769 edited by William Robert. Coleridge Bulletin No 24 (NS), Winter 2004, pp 101-107.

Review of Shelley among Others: The Play of the Intertext and the Idea of Language by Stuart Peterfreund. Modern Language Review Vol 99, No 3, 2004, pp 755-756.

Review of Mary Wollstonecraft and the Accent of the Feminine by Ashley Tauchert. Yearbook of English Studies Vol 34, 2004, pp 295-296.

Review of Mimesis and its Romantic Reflections by Frederick Burwick. Yearbook of English Studies Vol 34, 2004, pp 256-257.

Review of The Mental Anatomies of William Godwin and Mary Shelley by William D. Brewer; Mary Shelley in Her Times edited by Betty T. Bennett and Stuart Curran. Yearbook of English Studies Vol 34, 2004, pp 299-301.

Review of The Crowd: British Literature and Public Politics by John Plotz. Criticism Vol 44, No 1, Winter 2002, pp 103-106.

Review of British Women Writers and the Writing of History: 1670-1820 by Devoney Looser; Lucy Hutchinson: Order and Disorder by David Norbrook. Modern Language Review Vol 97, No 3, 2002, pp 683-684.

Review of Romantic Atheism: Poetry and Freethought, 1780-1830 by Martin Priestman. Journal of English and Germanic Philology Vol 101, No 2, April 2002, pp 272-273.

Review of The Politics of Motherhood: British Writing and Culture, 1680-1760 by Toni Bowers. Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in Their Lives, Work, and Culture Vol 2, 2002, pp 295-298.

Review of Reception and Poetics in Keats: ‘My Ended Poet’ by Jeffrey C. Robinson. The Yearbook of English Studies Vol 31, 2001, p 269.

Review of Keats’s Odes and Contemporary Criticism by James O’Rourke; Keats’s ‘Paradise Lost’ by Beth Lau.  Modern Language Review Vol 95, No 2, 2000, pp 473-474.

Review of Romanticism and the Self-Conscious Poem by Michael O’Neill. Journal of English and Germanic Philology Vol 99, No 1, January 2000, pp 149-151

Review of Thomas Gray: The Progress of a Poet by B. Eugene McCarthy. The Yearbook of English Studies Vol 30, 2000, p 314.

Review of Somatic Fictions: Imagining Illness in Victorian Culture by Athena Vrettos. AUMLA No 90, November 1998, pp 101-102.

Review of Pope, Swift, and Women Writers edited by Donald C. Mell. SHARP News: The Quarterly Newsletter of the Society for the History of Authorship, reading and Publishing Vol 7, No 4, Autumn 1998, p 12.

Review of Gray Agonistes: Thomas Gray and Masculine Friendship by Robert F. Gleckner. Modern Language Review Vol 93, No 4, 1998, pp 1088-1089.

Review of Sexual Power in British Romantic Poetry by Daniel P. Watkins. Journal of English and Germanic Philology Vol 97, No 1, January 1998, pp 141-143.

Review of Heaven, Hell, and the Victorians by Michael Wheeler; Victorian Poetry, Poetics and Politics by Isobel Armstrong. AUMLA No 87, 1997, pp 105-107. [Van de Veire]

Review of Disorderly Eaters: Texts in Self-Empowerment edited by Lilian R. Furst and Peter W. Graham. AUMLA No 85, 1996, pp 169-170. [Van de Veire]

Review of Domestic Realities and Imperial Fictions: Jane Austen’s Novels in Eighteenth-Century Contexts by Maaja A. Stewart. AUMLA No 85, 1996, pp 162-163. [Van de Veire]

Review of Don Juan (Theory in Practice Series) edited by Nigel Wood; Mansfield Park (Theory in Practice Series) edited by Nigel Wood; The Prelude (Theory in Practice Series) edited by Nigel Wood. AUMLA No 85, 1996, pp 164-167. [Van de Veire]

Review of William Wordsworth and the Hermeneutics of Incarnation by David P. Haney.  AUMLA No 85, 1996, pp 167-168. [Van de Veire]

Review of Gender, Art and Death by Janet Todd. AUMLA No 85, 1996, p 168. [Van de Veire]

Review of Companions Without Vows: Relationships Among Eighteenth-Century British Women by Betty Rizzo; Jane Austen and the Body by John Wiltshire; Eighteenth-Century Sensibility and the Novel by Ann Jessie Van Sant. AUMLA No 84, 1995, pp 136-139. [Van de Veire]

Review of The Slaughterhouse of Mammon: An Anthology of Victorian Social Protest Literature ed. by Sharon A. Winn and Lynn M. Alexander. AUMLA No 83, 1995, pp 120-121. [Van de Veire]

Review of Imagining Romanticism: Essays on English and Australian Romanticisms ed. by Deirdre Coleman and Peter Otto. AUMLA No 82, 1994, pp 132-134. [Van de Veire]

Review of The Idles by Damien Wilkins. New Zealand Books Vol 3, No 2, 1993, p 22. [Van de Veire]

Review of Trifecta by Frank Whitten. Stage and Radio Record No. 4, June 1991, pp 7-8.  

CONFERENCE PAPERS AND LECTURES

‘Thence proceeds mawkishness’: From Isabella (1818) to Lamia (1819), via Madeline (1819). Invited speaker at the Fifth Keats Foundation Conference, Keats House, Hampstead, UK, 18-20 May 2018.

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and the Summer of 1816. Invited speaker at the 2nd Pacific Climate Change Conference. Panel: The Role of Art in Making Sense of Climate Crises. Te Papa, Wellington, 21-23 February 2018.

Frankenstein: who is the monster? Invited talk. VicBooks Essential Reader’s List. Wellington, 1 November 2017.

Mary Shelley and Frankenstein. Invited U3A Lecture, Wellington, 24 October 2017.

The Legacy of Annette Vallon in Wordsworth Studies. Invited keynote lecture at the 46th Wordsworth Summer Conference, Rydal, 12-16 August, 2017.

Coleridge, the Morning Post, and Wordsworth. Invited lecture at the University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus, Tokyo, 29 June 2017.

Coleridge and the Romantic Newspaper. Invited seminar at the University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus, Tokyo, 29 June 2017.

Coleridge and the Media. Invited lecture at the Institute of European Studies, Sophia University, Tokyo, 28 June 2017.

Coleridge and the Romantic Newspaper: Public Media and Private Woes. Invited lecture at the London Romanticism Seminar, Senate House, Bloomsbury, London, 16 June 2017.

Flourishing with Humanities: Challenges and Possibilities. Invited lecture at the Human Flourishing Symposium, St Andrews Trust for the Study of Religion and Society, Wellington, 5-6 May 2017.

Professionalization and the Job Market. Together with Celeste Langan (UC Berkeley), Transporting Romanticism Biennial RSAA Conference, Wellington, 15 February 2017.

Thomas Gray and his Elegy at 300. Invited U3A lecture, Wellington, 25 October 2016.

Coleridge, Stillinger, and the Road to Dejection in the Morning Post. Invited lecture in honour of Prof. Em. Jack Stillinger. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA, 24 August 2016.

The Mad Monk in the Morning Post: Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Christabel. 45th Wordsworth Summer Conference, Rydal, UK, 14-18 August 2016.

‘As from the darkening gloom a silver dove’: Keats, Women, and Resilience. ‘Keats in London. Keats out of Town’ Keats Foundation Conference. Hampstead, England, 20-22 May 2016.

Jane Austen: Body and Mind. Invited U3A lecture. Wellington, 20 October 2015.

‘Poets had moved in this country once’: John Clare and William Cowper in John Mulgan’s Man Alone. The History of Emotions Conference, Stout Research Centre for New Zealand Studies and the Ministry of Culture and Heritage, Victoria University of Wellington, 3-5 September 2015.

Coleridge, Schiller, and the Ideal Reader. 2015 Romantic Studies Association of Australasia (RSAA) Conference, University of Melbourne, Australia, 23-25 July 2015.

‘smashed / itself to pieces on the ground’: Reading Hans Faverey in order to read J. M. Coetzee. Traverses: J. M. Coetzee in the World Conference, Adelaide, Australia, 11-13 November 2014.

‘A Wilful and Dramatic Exercise of Our Minds Towards each Other’: Keats’s Letters. Invited lecture, University College London, London, England, 20 October 2014.

The Nature of Consciousness on Wordsworth’s Salisbury Plain. Invited lecture, University of St Andrews, Scotland, 15 October 2014.

Self and Experience: Some Connections between William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Nishida Kitaro (1870-1945). 2014 NASSR Romantic Connections Conference, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 13-15 June 2014.

‘Water, water, everywhere, / Nor any drop to drink’: Vision and Violence in Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Invited U3A lecture. Wellington, 20 May 2014.

A Perfect Storm: Nature and Consciousness on Salisbury Plain. Invited Keynote lecture. 42nd Wordsworth Summer Conference, Rydal, UK, 5-15 August 2013.

And so I won my Genevieve. Invited lecture, Angels and Aristocrats exhibition, Te Papa, Wellington, 22 November 2012.

The Lyric Power of Connection in Wordsworth’s ‘Tintern Abbey’ and W. H. Auden’s ‘In Praise of Limestone’. 41st Wordsworth Summer Conference, Grasmere, UK, 30 July – 9 August 2012.

‘The Only Constant in a World of Change’: ‘Yearning Thought’ in Coleridge’s Malta Writings. ‘Encountering Malta: British Writers and the Mediterranean, 1740-1820’, an International Conference hosted by the Department of English, University of Malta, Valletta, Malta, 18-20 November 2011.

‘The union of Disparate things’: Coleridge’s Negotiation of Genius in Kubla Khan.  ‘Coleridge, Romanticism, and the Orient: Cultural Negotiations’ Conference, Kobe International Conference Center, Kobe, Japan, 16-18 July 2011.

Romantic Wonder in the Alexander Turnbull Library. The Wonder Workshop: A One-Day Conference on Wonder, Literature, and Romanticism. Victoria University of Wellington and the Alexander Turnbull Library. The Archives, Wellington, 4 April 2011.

The Friend of Keats: The Life and Times of Charles Brown. VUW Continuing Education Lecture. New Plymouth, 2 April 2011.

‘See what is coming from the distance dim!’: Keats and the Poetics of Distance. Romantic Studies Association of Australasia: Inaugural Conference at the University of Sydney, 10-12 February 2011.

Irritability and Sensibility: The Construction of Poetic Genius in Chapter Two of Biographia Literaria. 12th Coleridge Summer Conference, Cannington, UK, 21-28 July 2010.

The Construction of William Wordsworth in Sara Coleridge’s 1847 Edition of Biographia Literaria.  2009 Wordsworth Summer Conference, Grasmere, UK, 27 July – 6 August 2009.

Lucifer Down Under: Joost van den Vondel and the Alexander Turnbull Library. 400th Anniversary of Milton’s Birth Conference. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, 6 December 2008.

The Pious Man and the Lovely Courtesan: William Wordsworth and Annette Vallon in 1802.  16th Annual NASSR (North American Society for the Study of Romanticism) Conference, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, 21-24 August 2008.

“Alas we are not yet in the fashion”: The Wordsworths and Coleridge, 1812-1817. SEFTMS Research Talk, October 2007.

“Alas we are not yet in the fashion”: Wordsworth’s painful emancipation from Coleridge’s poetic vision in 1815-1817. 2007 Wordsworth Summer Conference, Grasmere, UK, 30 July-3 August 2007.

Neither Augustan nor Romantic: The Poet of Sensibility in Coleridge’s “Monody on the Death of Chatterton.”  13th David Nichol Smith Seminar, Otago University, Dunedin, 10-14 April 2007.  

Coleridge, the Morning Post, and the Autumn of 1802.  2006 Coleridge Summer Conference, Cannington, Somerset, UK, 20-26 July 2006.

Against the Forgetting. Invited lecture at the Dutch Poetry Workshop. Organized by Jan Lauwereyns, with Dietlinde Willockx, Marc Kregting, Greg O’Brien, Bill Manhire. City Gallery, Wellington, March 2006.

Coleridge’s Aesthetics of Defiance: The Case of “To William Wordsworth.”  NASSR (North American Society for the Study of Romanticism) Conference, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada, 13-17 August 2005.

The Life of Poetry: The Case of Coleridge. Invited lecture for the New Zealand Federation of Graduate Women, Wellington, July 2005.

Coleridge’s Dejection in the Morning Post. SEFT Research Talk, April 2005.

The Publication of Coleridge’s “Dejection” in the Morning Post.  “Paradise” SHARP Regional Conference, Wellington, 27-30 January 2005.

“Not near thee haply shall be more content!”: Place and Relationships in Coleridge’s Lyrics.  NASSR (North American Society for the Study of Romanticism) Conference, Fordham University, New York City, USA, 1-5 August 2003.

“A bright torch, and a casement ope at night, / To let the warm Love in!”: The Necessity of Loving in Keats. “Sustaining Romanticism” BARS (British Association for Romantic Studies) Conference, Liverpool, UK, 26-29 July 2001.

The Editor’s Subject: William Mason’s Construction of Thomas Gray.  “Remembering Don McKenzie” International Conference.  National Library of New Zealand, 12-14 July 2001.

Fashion and Authority in Edgeworth’s Tales. SEFT Research Talk, May 2001.

The State of Research in New Zealand. Panel paper presented at the Stout Centre, VUW, 11 April 2001. [invited presentation]

‘Energy is Eternal Delight’: William Blake. Invited lecture presented at the National Library of New Zealand in the context of the Burning Bright Blake Exhibition, 8 February 2001.

‘English Romanticism and Tintern Abbey’. Two two-hour seminars at the University of Ghent, Belgium, 25 November 1999. [invited lectures]

Maria Edgeworth and Susan Ferrier.  Conference on the Romantic Era Novel, University of Groningen and Sheffield Hallam University, University of Groningen, The Netherlands, 17-19 November 1999.

“Ambitious Tyrants and Abject Slaves”: The Construction of Self in Mary Robinson’s Lyrical Tales.  Women Poets of the Romantic Period Conference, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA, 18-20 February 1999.

“’We Are Two’: The Address to Dorothy in ‘Tintern Abbey’.” NASSR North American Society for the Study of Romanticism)/BARS (British Association for Romantic Studies) Conference, Strawberry Hill, London, UK, 6-10 July 1998.  

‘They’re cookin’’: Virtuous Women Poets. AULLA Conference, Dunedin, 1-5 February 1993.

‘I’m Incorrect’: Constructing the Female Poetic Self in the Age of Sensibility. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Conference, Kansas City, MO, USA, October 24-26 1991.

Women’s Poetry in the Age of Sensibility. Invited lecture delivered at Auckland University, 12 September 1991.

Coleridge’s Portrait of the Revolutionary Poet in To William Wordsworth. Revolutionary Romanticism, 1790-1990, Conference. Wordsworth Trust America, at Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA, USA, 5-8 April 1990.

The Mastery of Fear in William Collins’s Ode to Fear. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (Midwest Division) Conference, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA, 3-4 November 1989.

‘Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité: Pour Qui? Pourquoi?’. Historicizing the 1740-1820 Period in the Classroom. Presenter and panel leader at the Graduate Studies Conference in English Studies, University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA, 12-14 October 1989.

‘If That Name Thou Love’: An Ironic Reading of Wordsworth’s ‘Ode to Duty’. International Conference on Romanticism and Revolution, Lancaster, Lancaster University, UK, 5-8 July 1989.

RADIO PROGRAMMES

Conversation. Produced by Lucy Orbell. National Programme, Sunday 30 September 2007.

A Joy Forever: A 200th-birthday celebration of John Keats. Top of the Week, Concert FM, Monday 30 October 1995. [Van de Veire]

EXHIBITION

Rare Book’s 200th Anniversary: Wordsworth and Coleridge’s Lyrical Ballads. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, Friday 9 October 1998- 15 December 1998.