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Call for reviewers: BARS Review

The BARS Review is the review journal of the British Association for Romantic Studies, providing timely and comprehensive coverage of new monographs, essay collections, editions and other works dealing with the literature, history… Read more »

Five Questions: Yasemin Hacıoğlu on Thinking Through Poems

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Yasemin Hacıoğlu is an Associate Professor in English Literature, Culture and Didactics at Volda University College. Her work encompasses feminist literature, cognitive literary theory, and queer and feminist social movements. Her first monograph, Thinking Through Poems: Composition, Emotion and Decision-Making in Romantic-Era Women’s Novels, which we discuss below, is published by Bloomsbury as part of the Cognition, Poetics, and the Arts series.

1) How did you first become interested in how women in novels construct their choices?

My starting point was a summer holiday during undergraduate studies that I spent reading Ann Radcliffe’s The Mysteries of Udolpho. The heroine’s ability to concentrate on landscape description and composition, throughout a narrative characterised by long, repetitive cycles of what we now term gaslighting and threats of sexual violence, was incredibly powerful. I hadn’t read anything like it before. Back at university I ended up getting quite angry, and rehearsing counterarguments for what I wish I had said in the moment, after the novel was discussed on a Romanticism course through derogatory euphemisms about the supposed pressure to include the (one) woman author.

I liked but wasn’t fully convinced by the summary on the back cover of my OUP paperback that Udolpho represents “psychological disintegration” which influenced “Sade, Poe, and other writers”. I thought that, perhaps, this focus emerged by reading Udolpho through critical and genre frameworks that overlooked something more challenging in the novel: that the heroine is able to construct decisions in situations of domestic violence, situations that are otherwise deliberately contrived to dismantle her capacity to think.

2) How did you decide to focus specifically on the composition of poetry within novels?

I’ve been thinking about the “sea-nymph” poems in Radcliffe’s Udolpho for over 10 years at this point. These poems are repetitive, and they take on slightly different forms as the heroine Emily handles new uncertainties over how to judge and respond to the situation she faces. I think the power that I found in their repetitive nature also led me to the cognitive narratological approaches that I use in the book. I didn’t think their repetitive nature could be summarised as symptoms of a lack of imagination – a “not quite Romanticism” that women authors from the time period often get as their epitaph. I also didn’t think the poems work by notions of unconscious, buried thinking: the “if only she had been fully aware she was in a bad situation” line of summary. Or, in some critical strains, “if only her head was properly screwed on”. In a plot situation were thoughts and perceptions are deliberately dismantled, the red thread offered by these repetitions and recompositions work to match up recurring uncertainties, amplify perceptions that something isn’t quite right, and use fantastical composition to build that narrative enquiry. Studying how composition processes offer modes of rethinking feelings and imagined responses for the protagonists was also central to reassessing the philosophical and political work of these novels.

3) How did you select your case studies (Ann Radcliffe, Charlotte Smith, Eleanor Sleath, Charlotte Dacre and Amelia Opie)?

Moments that I found especially powerful were when heroines refused the affective terms expected of them. In Eleanor Sleath’s The Orphan of the Rhine, for instance, when the heroine Laurette is told to consider the danger she is in, she responds (to paraphrase) “why should I?”. I read these moments as responses crafted in the poems through composition practices. Similar affective stances across the poems in Charlotte Smith’s Celestina have received criticism from her contemporaries, and in current criticism alike, for a narcissistic quality. And yet this positionality allows Celestina to refuse and even advise other characters to stop empathising with and returning to patriarchal characters who endanger them.

The author I spent the most time unpicking during the PhD was Amelia Opie. The moments where minor characters in her late novels voice feelings and take decisions that depart from plot and social expectations were like a puzzle, that, once figured out, came back to the heroines’ compositions of elaborate emotional arguments in their poems. Opie’s heroines write affective scripts for other characters and then hand them out, so that they can puppeteer others’ minds. Opie allows us to laugh at how easy it is to plant emotional scripts into the minds of hapless characters who believe these feelings are their own authentic, spontaneous and individual responses. But this ridicule is unsettling because it raises question over how our most seemingly personal responses are scripted and socially constructed.

As I read more gothic novels, I circled back to thinking about how cultural narratives about responding to gendered violence are still too simple and dangerous. I thought about how social realities are still absent from judgemental popular cultural imaginaries and narratives, such as the increased danger to life women are in when they try to leave domestic violence. Now that I reflect on the process, one lens I had in mind when developing the book was looking for narrative structures that complicate or change our expectations of how characters in these situations make decisions. Women’s fiction that does not quite fit the genre classifications we currently work with provides a rich archive and resource for challenging how we imagine these narratives work.

4) Which poems within novels did you come to admire most as you worked on the project?

In Charlotte Dacre’s Confessions of the Nun of St. Omer, the heroine Cazire composes “The Exile: Written on the Sea” when she is pregnant, unmarried and starving. In an alternative move to feeling penitence and rehearsing self-destructing moral narratives – that would fit this plot situation in a conservative seduction tale – Cazire’s poem instead imagines an expansive, disembodied subject “struggling with an host of foes, / That more elastic from oppression grows”. In the prose, Cazire adopts this position for herself: she reimagines herself as a Romantic hero who will intellectually benefit from this experience. This position allows her to dismantle intensifying social prompts for her to adopt the role of a passive, feminine subject.

Dacre’s protagonists have mostly been received as monstrous or psychologically disordered – again, both by her contemporaries and in some influential strands of criticism now. I think such categorizations of women characters who dismantle social affective scripts, both in academic criticism and in social imaginaries, are concerned with the imagined line of “going too far” from gendered social expectations. In this imaginary, there are safe ways to “protest”, that do not significantly challenge, or might even reinforce, social structures that play out through gendered social emotions. Dacre’s protagonist seems actively to seek to cross that imagined boundary, almost as an intellectual exercise and as an end in itself. I think that this poem and novel represent an aesthetic vehicle to imaginatively remove that boundary and construct a narrative of what happens after: the poem occurs partway through the novel, rather than at a moment of ending or “closure”, and the protagonist uses this poem as the starting point of a new self-awareness.

5) What new projects are you currently working on?

Working on Opie and her reworkings of conservative moral tales in particular got me thinking about the study of social narratives: how they cross between fiction and daily use, manifest in unexpected places, and can be strategically recomposed. I live in rural Norway now and am working with some brilliant colleagues on LGBTQ+ Pride events.

There is a parallel I think between the backlash in anti-gender movements now and the post-French-Revolution politics that I study in the book, where there is a mixture of rhetoric about the lack of ongoing need for gender equality campaigns, while at the same time old narratives that normalise intolerance are being reworked into new forms that are framed as timeless or “natural”. There are now additionally systematised campaigns to frame such reactionary narratives and actions stemming from by them as “mainstream” or socially acceptable thinking. It is important to look at the work of activists and authors who try to show the workings of these narratives and how they can be altered.

I am also interested in how protagonists in contemporary feminist novels use a strategy that parallels the compositions by gothic heroines. Namely, they refuse to think with the narratives that they are told they should think through, narratives that have emerged from anti-gender and abortion campaigns into mainstream discussions and healthcare systems in recent years. Lotta Elstad’s novel Jeg Nekter å Tenke (in English I Refuse to Think) starts with the protagonist’s refusal to think through narratives that she is told she must use before she can access an abortion.

I think there has recently been a reappraisal of the connection between trauma and gendered narratives concerning women in popular culture across creative media. There is more work to be done on understanding how these compositional moves offer us tools for handling and providing alternatives to the proliferation of anti-gender narratives.

Romantic Medievalism: Four Women’s Texts

Thank you so much to Rupsha Banerjee for writing this illuminating blog post introducing us to four women-authored Romantic-period medievalist texts! If you would like to contribute to the blog, please email the comms team at britishassociationromantic@gmail.com. We are always excited to share short essays on any aspect of Romanticism (and Romantic receptions).

Letitia Elizabeth Landon’s silver-fork novel, Romance and Reality (1830), makes a couple of fleeting references to the legendary King Arthur and his knight Sir Lancelot, highlighting their trials to convince the protagonist (and readers) that one would do well not to be carried away by the glamour of romance. By contrast, Mary Matilda Betham’s long poem The Lay of Marie (1816), dealing with a fictional episode from the life of the twelfth-century trobairitz Marie de France, contains extensive notes on various medieval historical and legendary figures. In the introduction to Clara Reeve’s long essay, The Progress of Romance, Through Times, Countries, and Manners (1785), she explains that she was once implicitly accused by a man of fabricating Egyptian romances, which perhaps leads her to provide the ample references that she proceeds to include in the text. As I discovered in the course of researching my MA dissertation at Jadavpur University—completed in the final semester of the two-year programme under the supervision of Dr Ramit Samaddar—these differences in women writers’ approach to the medieval are not random, but products of a rich and complex relationship they cultivated with the ghosts of the past.

Why were women writers turning to medieval romances and medievalist scholarship?

While the Middle Ages had long captivated British cultural texts, as evidenced by Edmund Spenser and others, medievalism had a new impetus in the Romantic era with several discursive texts being published, including Richard Hurd’s Letters on Chivalry and Romance (1762), Thomas Warton’s Observations on the Fairy Queen of Spenser (1762), and most crucially Thomas Percy’s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765), which certainly rejuvenated an interest in the past. At a time when women were beginning to publicly engage with literary discourse, a substantial body of women’s medievalism naturally followed.

This, as Katie Garner argues, was aided by the fact that most medieval texts, at least those in Middle English, were more easily accessed by women readers, unlike, say, Hellenism, which continued to dominate Romantic thought (Coleridge would dub Betham England’s ‘more fortunate Sappho’ in his poem ‘To Matilda Betham, From a Stranger’) but required a familiarity with Ancient Greek and Latin texts which was denied to women (2017: 5).

Additionally, the medievalist tradition enabled women writers to comment on current issues, such as nation-formation and gender, without facing political and/or gendered censure.

For instance, Romantic writers used medieval history and romance to fashion a sense of national identity in the rapidly changing political landscape of post-French Revolution Europe. Joanna Baillie’s 1802 plays, Ethwald I and II, set during the Heptarchy, testify to the British medieval’s suitability for this purpose. Figures associated with the Arthurian tradition, too, are similarly co-opted, as seen in Betham’s The Lay of Marie, in which the heroine navigates the fraught relationship between English and French nobility during the Battle of Normandy. These works reveal a growing interest, most importantly, in writing women into the narrative of British nation-formation (Elizabeth Deirdre Gilbert notes Baillie’s inclusion of multiple classes of women negotiating and/or influencing the wars waged actively by men). Baillie herself introduces her plays saying that, in using a distant history rather than the present, her reworking may avoid disturbing any important truths (1802: x).

The issue of gender was intrinsic to Romantic discourse on the Middle Ages. As Garner demonstrates, part of the male Romantic project of rereading Arthurian texts was to ‘regender’ the idea of romance-reading, as the genre had long been associated with female readers (2017: 3-5, 19-22). Romantic women essayists, often taking inspiration from these very scholarly works, authored their own treatises as counterpoints to this regendering, especially insofar as it insisted that women readers should not read romances. Reeve’s Progress of Romance is such a project, and a didactic one at that, as Gerd Karin Omdal identifies (2013: 693), arguing in favour of romance-reading, particularly among young people.

This view evolved even as medieval romances and their adaptations became more ubiquitous over time. Landon’s Romance and Reality, written nearly half a century after Reeve, continues to focus on the didactic value of romances, but walks a fine line between encouraging and cautioning women readers of the genre. This, as Claire Knowles observes, is rather anomalous in the silver-fork genre (2012: 253), indicating a deliberate subversion of generic expectations, aided by medieval material.

By way of a final observation, through a brief look at Romantic women’s medievalism, one may conclude that it was their works that laid a significant portion of that foundation on which the Victorian era would go on to define their own age through a medieval lens. The works of these writers capitalised on a growing popularity of the Middle Ages (be it Britain’s own historical past or fictional accounts of Arthurian and other legends) and in turn led to a literary tradition for and by women that may yet reveal much more about contemporary sensibilities.

Acknowledgements: I would like to take this opportunity to thank the Department of English at Jadavpur University, the only UGC Centre for Advanced Study in English in India, for offering the semester-long course Dissertation Writing (ENG/PG/H29) to the 2023–2025 MA batch, of which I was a student. Coordinated by Professor Paromita Chakravarti and Dr Ramit Samaddar, the course enabled me to take my first steps into the world of literary research.

Bio: Rupsha Banerjee completed her postgraduate degree at the Department of English, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, in 2025, and currently works as a part-time editor at the Jadavpur University Press. Her interests include the Middle Ages, nineteenth-century literature, myths in popular culture, and contemporary literature. She has shared her research through national and international scholarly conferences such as the International Congress on Medieval Studies and the Northeast Popular Culture Association Annual Virtual Conference (NEPCA). Alongside this, she is also a published translator and a keen lover of languages.

Bibliography

Baillie, Joanna. 1821. Ethwald: A Tragedy Parts I and II, in A series of plays: in which it is attempted to delineate the stronger passions of the mind: each passion being the subject of a tragedy and a comedy, 3 vols, ii (London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown)

Betham, Mary Matilda. 1978. The Lay of Marie and Vignettes in Verse (New York and London: Garland Publishing)

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. 1802. ‘To Matilda Betham From a Stranger.’ GPI. https://gpi.dhil.lib.sfu.ca/poem/c75.html [accessed 20 June 2023]

Garner, Katie. 2017. Romantic Women Writers and Arthurian Legend: The Quest for Knowledge. (London: Palgrave Macmillan)

Gilbert, Elizabeth Deirdre. 2006. ‘Desires and History: Historical Representation in Frances Burney’s Edwy and Elgiva and Joanna Baillie’s Ethwald’, European Romantic Review, 17. 3, pp. 327-334, doi:10.1080/10509580600816777

Knowles, Claire. 2012. ‘Celebrity, Femininity and Masquerade: Reading Letitia Landon’s Romance and Reality’, European Romantic Review 23.2, pp.247–263, doi:10.1080/10509585.2012.653283

Landon, Letitia Elizabeth. 1856. Romance and Reality, in The Complete Works of L. E. Landon (Boston: Phillips, Sampson and Company)

Omdal, Gerd Karin. 2013. ‘Clara Reeve’s Progress of Romance and the Female Critic in the 18th Century’, Literature Compass, 10.9, pp. 688–695, doi:10.1111/lic3.12077

Reeve, Clara. 1930. The Progress of Romance, Through Times, Countries, and Manners and the History of Charoba, Queen of Egypt (New York: The Facsimile Text Society). Reproduced from the Colchester Edition of 1785


Fully funded PhD opportunity on Maria Edgeworth at University College Cork, Ireland

Dear BARS colleagues,

I am writing with news of a funded PhD position in Cork, to work as part of the nationally funded Research Ireland Rinn Artificial Intelligence network on a project related to Maria Edgeworth. ( Sept/Oct 2026 start date.)

The person offered the studentship will have an annual stipend of €25,000, a generous budget for training and travel and be part of a national, structured, cohort-based PhD training programme. 

Further details including application process are in the attached document. 

Please circulate widely to interested students who are finishing BA or MA studies and contact me with any queries. 

Research Theme: Cultural & Political Analytics (1 PhD scholarship) 

● PhD Topic: A data-driven analysis of a foundational Irish woman writer, Maria Edgeworth (1768-1849), including research into her correspondence, novels and writing for children Supervisor: Professor Claire Connolly – claireconnolly@ucc.ie School of English and Digital Humanities 

— Claire Connolly

Opportunity: The Year’s Work in English Studies

The Year’s Work in English Studies is an annual review of scholarly work on English language and literatures written in English from 601 to the present; expert critical commentary is provided for each essay and book covered. YWES is the largest and most comprehensive work of its kind and the oldest evaluative work of literary criticism.

Applications are now open to contribute to the poetry section of ‘1780-1830: The Romantic Period’. 

All contributors get to keep review copies of books. YWES pays contributors at the rate of £8 per page of the printed volume. But this is also an opportunity to stay up-to-date with relevant publications in your field and to join a supportive community of reviewers, editors, and publishers.

Get in touch with Anna Fancett, the Associate Editor, at anna.fancett@talk21.com if you have any questions. 

To apply, please submit a copy of your CV to Anna at the same email address. If you have not yet published, please include a writing sample (of no more than 5000 words) and ask someone who knows your work well to write a brief reference on your behalf outlining your suitability for the role.

The deadline is 25 June 2026; scholars at any career stage are warmly encouraged to apply. 

—————-

Anna Fancett

BARS Digital Event: TikTok, Short-form Content Creation, and Romantic Research

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30th June 2026, 5pm BST
Join meeting: https://uni-mainz-de.zoom.us/j/62337163567?pwd=JCBuA8RmtGHoRmbkLL0ovZFNzaxD2U.1#success
Meeting ID: 623 3716 3567
Passcode: 651977

BARS’s TikTok account provides a platform for sharing tidbits of Romanticism with a wider audience. All of our members are welcome to contribute to the TikTok page to share their expertise, but we understand that short-form video is a confusing format for many people to work in. In this workshop run by the BARS communications team (Amy Wilcockson and Chloe Wilcox), we will provide practical information of how to make TikToks for us, showing you:

  • How TikTok works;
  • How to choose a topic to speak about and tailor it to the time limit;
  • How to film and edit videos.

The workshop will include a breakout session in which you’ll have the opportunity to brainstorm your own video.

We hope that attending will make the prospect of making a TikTok for us less intimidating, and allow us to feature a wider range of expertise on our account (from people like you!). It’ll also help you with other academic and Romantic social media work by getting you familiar with the mysterious but ever-growing world of short-form vertical video.

— Chloe Wilcox

Drama Queens of the Georgian Period: A Tragic-Comic Entertainment, by Sarah Burdett

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Dr Sarah Burdett (Cambridge) tells us about her play, ‘Drama Queens of the Georgian Period: A Tragi-Comic Entertainment’. This blog post accompanies a short film, which you can watch on the BARS Youtube channel.

Drama Queens of the Georgian Period: A Tragic-Comic Entertainment.

In April 2026, I was delighted to collaborate with a group of actors to bring to life a play I had devised about women in Georgian theatre. The play, titled ‘Drama Queens of the Georgian Period: A Tragic-Comic Entertainment’, was performed at the Judith E. Wilson Drama Studio, University of Cambridge, as part of the Cambridge Festival. The idea grew out of my ongoing research into the lives and works of forgotten female theatre-makers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (performers, dramatists, stage-managers), whose names have been all but erased from mainstream accounts of Britain’s theatrical past. The play’s action was inspired by, and revolved around, a series of verbatim female-authored / female-performed addresses and epilogues, written between 1750 and 1831, selected to offer non-specialist audiences a glimpse of the challenges faced by women who dared to venture into the male-dominated world of the Georgian playhouse, at a time when women’s proper place was considered to be in the home.

The play, and the addresses that it featured, focalised the following questions:

  • How did women negotiate and justify their right to pursue a professional ambition which demanded a departure from their ‘private’ obligations?
  • To what extent did their visibility in the theatre facilitate women’s capacity to expose, complicate and disrupt the period’s rigid sexual hierarchies and patriarchal biases?
  • What were the public / professional responses to these women?
  • How might their experiences still speak to us today?

Placing centre stage the voices of women not heard in over 200 years, the show provided amusing, surprising and often starkly troubling insight into women’s uniquely gendered experiences of Britain’s historical playhouse, while acknowledging and celebrating the female pioneers who championed women’s right to public and professional careers, paving the way for female theatre-makers of today.

A full cast list from the production (2nd April 2026) is reproduced below, along with copies of the epilogues and addresses featured in the performance, and used in the accompanying film, produced by Andrew Smith at FleetingYearFilms.

I am grateful to have been awarded a Judith E. Wilson Small Grant to fund this event.

For inquiries about the show / the women it features / its relationship to my research, I’m very happy to be contacted at scb93@cam.ac.uk.

Cast and Team

Male Theatre Manager / Male Performer: Manley Gavich
Kitty Clive: Jenny Scudamore
Frances Abington: Eliza Harrison
Sarah Siddons: Eliza Harrison
Sarah Yates: Jenny Scudamore
Eliza Macauley: Eliza Harrison
Madame Eliza Vestris / Narrator: Sarah Burdett
Director and script writer: Sarah Burdett
Lighting: Anna Gungaloo

Epilogues and Addresses

1.‘Epilogue’. From Kitty Clive’s comedy The Rehearsal, or, Bayes in Petticoats (1750), performed at the Drury Lane Theatre, London. Spoken by Kitty Clive. Written by David Garrick. Delivered in film / performance by Jenny Scudamore

David Garrick, manager of the prestigious Drury Lane Theatre, was an ostensible supporter of female playwrights. But this epilogue, spoken by actress, singer and author Kitty Clive, at the close of her comedy The Rehearsal, takes an ironic turn, suggesting that women who write are abandoning their properly feminine duties by neglecting the cares of the home.

A woman write! Hey-day! Cry one and all!
No wonder truly, Bedlam, is too small.
Should this wind circulate and grow a fashion
Each house would be a mad one thro’ the Nation –  
But pray, sirs, why must we not write, nor think?
Have we not heads, and hands, and Pen and Ink?
Can you boast more, that are so wondrous wise?
Have women then no weapons but their eyes?
Were we, like you, to let our Genius loose
We’d top your wit and match you for abuse: …
Have we not proved when ladies please to write 
how much tis ours to profit and Delight? …
In this age, so happy and refined,
What is there not perform’d by womankind?
Unvapoured now, by low domestic cares
And all the plague of family affairs…
From Joy to Joy, from Drum to Drum they roam
And nothing now is unenjoyed – but home –
In wit, in pleasure, we surpass your Spirit –
In what then lies your vast superior merit –
In All our Sex’s Name, Commision’d I,
You Braggadocio Tyrant Men defye;
Name but your Arms, the time and place – we’ll meet you,
Fight us but fair, and on my life we’ll beat you

2. ‘EPILOGUE’. From Frances Sheridan’s comedy The Dupe (1763). Written and spoken by Kitty Clive, who had performed in the play. Delivered in film / performance by Jenny Scudamore

Now able to speak for herself, Clive ridicules the suggestion that women should only ever write for the stage as a last resort, and implies the effortlessness with which they can produce comic verse  

Ladies, methinks I hear you all complain,
Lord! Here’s the talking creature come again!
The men seem frightened, for ’tis on record
A prating female will have the last word.
But you’re all out; for sure as you’re alive,
Not Mrs Friendly now, I’m Mrs. Clive;
No character from fiction will I borrow,
But if you please, I’ll talk again to−morrow.
Then you conclude, from custom long in vogue,
That I come here to speak an Epilogue,
With satyr, humour, spirit, quite refin’d,
Double−entendre too, with wit combin’d, 
Not for the ladies, but to please the men.
All this you guess, and now you’re out again;
For to be brief, our author bid me say
She tried, but cou’dn’t get one to her play.
No Epilogue! why, Ma’am, you’ll spoil your treat,
An Epilogue’s the cordial after meat;
For when the feast is done, without all question,
They’ll want liquors to help them with digestion … 
So beg your friends to write, for faith ’tis hard,
If ‘mongst them all you cannot find one bard.
She took the hint. Will you, good Sir? or you, Sir?
A sister scribbler! sure you can’t refuse her!
… A poet [was asked], but he alleged for reason 
The Muses were so busy at this season,
In penning libels, politics and satyrs,
They had not leisure for such trifling matters.
What’s to be done, she cry’d? Can’t you endeavour
To say some pretty thing? I know you’re clever.
I promis’d, but, unable to succeed,
Beg you’ll accept this rambling deed.

3. ‘Epilogue’. From Elizabeth Craven’s Miniature Picture (1781). Spoken by actress Frances Abington. Written by Joseph Jekyll. Delivered in performance by Eliza Harrison

Frances Abington, actress and subsequent fashion icon, had publicly fallen out with Garrick who defined her as capable only of embodying whimsical and trivial roles becoming of farce. She opposed his ill-treatment of female dramatists and actresses and accused him of ruling with an iron rod.

The men, like tyrants of the vilest kind
Have long our sexes energy confined.
In full dress black, with bows and solemn stalk
Have long monopolised the prologue’s walk.
But still the flippant epilogue was ours,
It asked, for gay support, the female pow’rs 
It asked a flirting girl, coquet and free,
And so, to master it, they fixed on me.

But they mistake my talents – I was born
To tell in sobs and sighs, some tale forlorn
to whet my handkerchief with Juliet’s woes,
Or tune to Shaw’s despair my tragic nose.
Yes, Gentlemen, in education spite,
You still shall find, that we can read, and write
Like you, can swell a Debt or a Debate,
Can quit the table to steer the state.
… Methinks even now I hear my sex’s tongues
The sweet smart melody or female lungs
The storm of Question, the Division calm,
With “hear her! Hear her! Mrs Speaker Ma’am!”
 … Look to the camp! – Coxheath and Warley common[1]
supplied at least for every tent a woman
… Love was the watchword till the morning strife
Roused the tame major and his warring wife.                                                                 

Look to the stage – Tonight’s example draws,
a female dramatist to grace the cause.
Too long your sex has Pegasus bestowed
A neat side saddle is an easier load …
Myself can drive a phaeton, and, let me see
There’s Mrs Astley – she can manage three!…[2]
The men invade our rights – The delicate Elves
They lisp and stutter, like creatures ourselves
Rouge more than we do, simper, flounce and fret
And they coquet. Good God! How they coquet.
They too are coy, and monstrous to relate
Theirs is the coyness in a tete a tete.
… So cease the triumphs of presumpt’ous man! 
And would you ladies but complete my plan
Here should you sign some patriot petition
To mend our constitutional condition.  … 
This fair committee shall detail the rest.
Then let the monsters (if they dare) Protest!

4: ‘Farewell Address’ (1782). Written and spoken by Sarah Siddons. Delivered following her performance in The Distrest Mother. Recited in film / performance by Eliza Harrison

This now famous address was spoken by revered tragedienne Sarah Siddons following her 1782 performance of the eponymous heroine in Ambrose Philip’s The Distrest Mother. The play constituted Siddons’s farewell performance at the Theatre Royal, Bath, ahead of her lucrative move to London’s Drury Lane. Directly contesting the implications of the opening epilogue (from The Rehearsal), Siddons re-models the actress as a devoted mother, showing her professional ambition and her duties to her children to go entirely hand in hand.

Have I not raised some expectation here?
Wrote by herself? What! Authoress and player?
True, we have heard her, thus I guess’d you’d say,
With decency recite another’s lay;
But never heard, nor ever could we dream
Herself had sipp’d the Heliconian stream.
What will she treat of in this same address,
Is it to shew her learning? – Can you guess?
Here let me answer. No; far different views
Possess’d my soul, and fir’d my virgin Muse;
‘Twas honest gratitude, at whose request
Shamed be the heart that will not do its best.
The time draws nigh when I must bid adieu
To this delightful spot, nay, ev’n to you
To you, whose fost’ring kindness rear’d my name,
O’erlooked my faults, but magnified my fame. …

Oh! could kind Fortune, where I next am thrown,
Bestow but half the candour you have shewn.
Envy o’ercome, will hurl her pointless dart,
And critic gall be shed without its smart,
The numerous doubts and fears I entertain,
Be idle all as all possess’d in vain.
But to my promise. If I thus am blessed,
In friendship link’d, beyond my worth caress’d,
Why don’t I here, you’ll say, content remain,
Nor seek uncertainties for certain gain?
What can compensate for the risks you run;
And what your reasons? Surely you have none.
To argue here would but your time abuse:
I keep my word; my reason I produce.

Her three children enter

These are the moles that bear me from your side;
Where I was rooted, where I could have died.
Stand forth, ye elves, and plead your mother’s cause;
Ye little magnets, whose soft influence draws
Me from a point where every gentle breeze,
Wafted my bark to happiness and ease
Sends me adventurous on a larger main,
In hopes that you may profit by my gain.
Have I been hasty? am I then to blame;
Answer, all ye who own a parent’s name.
Thus have I tried you with an untaught Muse,
Who for your favour still most humbly sues,
That you, for classic learning, will receive
My soul’s best wishes, which I freely give
For polished periods round, and touched with art,
The fervent offering of my grateful heart.

4. ‘Occasional Address’. Spoken by Mrs (Sarah) Yates in 1797 at the Haymarket Theatre, London, following her performance in Thomas Francklin’s tragedy The Earl of Warwick, in which she played the heroine, Margaret of Anjou. Delivered in film / performance by Jenny Scudamore

Sarah Yates, aunt-through-marriage of the acclaimed tragic actress, Mary Anne Yates, was unknown in London prior to this performance. The play was staged for her benefit to help provide the finances needed for her to care for her children following her husband’s shocking murder at his home in Pimlico: an event widely reported in the press.

The transient scene of mimic passions past
The far more arduous task’s reserv’d at last – 
Oppress’d with gratitude, permit me here
To breathe the dictates of a heart sincere;
Cheer’d by your kindness, e’en amidst my woes
My soul with renovated transport blows!
Amid these tears, the rays of joy illume
The abyss of grief, and dissipate its gloom.
Each low’ring cloud, with dire Misfortune shed,
And veil’d in Grief, this once devoted head,
By your benignant breath is chac’d away
Like noxious vapours at return of day. – 
Fain would I speak:—alas! these rising tears
Must plead the Orphan’s cause, the Widow’s fears.
To you, the little Innocents appeal,
And lift their trembling hands with grateful zeal:
Robb’d of a parent, ere they knew his worth,
Each pleasing prospect clouded in its birth;
Oh, may their hard and hapless lot attain
Your kind protection: – shall they sue in vain?
Ah no: – for Britons, generous as brave
With rapture fly to succour and to save – 
My grateful heart expands with new delight
Grief and Despair shall wing their devious flight:
Fair Hope, serenely smiling, fills my breast,
And lulls each anxious thought to balmy rest.
’Tis yours, you liberal patrons, yours the praise,
To you, the hymn of Gratitude I raise:
Your genial kindness swells this throbbing heart
With extacy, and blunts Misfortune’s dart.
Blessed with your smiles, I breathe, I live again,
With such protectors, how can I complain?

5: ‘Epilogue’. Written and spoken by Elizabeth Wright Macauley following her one-woman-show, The Regalio, performed at the Town and Anchor Tavern, London, 1818. Delivered in film / performance by Eliza Harrison

Eliza Macauley was ostracised from Britain’s patent theatres after publishing a series of scathing attacks on the exploitative treatment of financially vulnerable actresses (of which she was one) by oppressive male theatre managers. Rather than accepting defeat and relinquishing her professional ambition, Macauley took matters into her hands, writing a series of one-woman-shows which she performed in taverns and minor playhouses across the country. Preceding the solo performances of the actress Fanny Kelly, this was a bold move for a woman, and Macauley’s anxieties around how well audiences would respond to her new initiative is signalled in her epilogue.

Custom exacts, and who denies her sway
An epilogue to every five Act play.
So Coleman writes, but you perhaps may say
Why epilogue for me – mine is no play?
Why that’s most true – not by dramatic rule;
Mine is a mixture we’ll call it the New School. …
But truce to arguments of vain resort
Let’s fall to something of more serious sort:
To me the awful moment is at hand 
To prove if in your favour I can stand –
Alone – unfriended – no protector near
To raise my hopes to dissipate my fear.
Sometime a wanderer on the earth’s wide stage
To gentle gales or to the Tempest’s rage
By turns alas exposed; now raised on high
By partial praises, vaulting to the sky;
Or now again, by envious foes beset;
For foes will rise when envy spreads the net.
… Such are the tempests of theatric life
The Envenom’d Tongue of Discord Breeding strife…
Oh may my Tempest driven bark find here
A peaceful haven safe from every fear!
Let me from you obtain a prosperous name
And be the heralds of my growing fame … 
My humble efforts, then, with kindness view –
My highest pleasure rests in pleasing you.

6. ‘Address’. Spoken by Madame Eliza Vestris in 1831 at the Olympic Theatre following her performance of Penelope in Robert Planche’s Prometheus and Pandora. Written by John Hamilton Reynolds. Delivered in film by Jenny Scudamore

This address was delivered to mark Madame Vestris’s newfound role as manager of the Olympic Theatre, London. Vestris had achieved success as an actress, singer, and stage designer. But, exasperated by her reliance on erratic male theatre managers for the procurement of work and income, she boldly took control of her own playhouse and company.

Noble and gentle – Matrons – patrons – Friends!
Before you here a venturous woman bends!
A warrior woman – that in strife embarks
The first of all dramatic Joan of Arcs.
Cheer on the enterprise, thus dared by me!
The first that ever led a company!
What though, until this very hour and age,
A Lessee-lady never owned a stage!             
I’m that Belle Sauvage – only rather quieter,
Like Mrs Nelson, turned a stage proprietor! …
Humour and wit encourage my intent 
And music means to help me pay my rent.
’Tis not mere promise, I appeal to the facts;
Henceforward judge me only by my acts!
In this, my purpose, stand I not alone –
All women sigh for houses of their own;
And I was weary of perpetual dodging
from house to house in search of board and lodging!
… Oh, my kind friends! Befriend me still as you 
have in the bygone times been wont to do;
…Cheer on my comrades, too, in their career
some of your favourites are around me here …
Still aid the petticoat on old kind principles
and make me yet a Captain of Invincibles. 


[1] Play was staged amidst the backdrop of the American war, at which point military camps were established across Britain, the most famous being Coxheath and Warley. Women accompanied men to the camps to offer support as wives.

[2] Mrs Patty Astley was a circus performer at Astley’s Amphitheatre (run by her husband), renowned for her physical prowess and bodily strength.

BARS Conference 2026: Updates and Updated Programmes

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Hello everyone,

We write with a few key updates about BARS 2026.

Registration and Bookings (note deadlines!)

Thank you to those who have already registered for the conference. We’d like to remind everyone that the registration deadline for the in-person conference is Sunday 5th July. (For those attending just the online events, the deadline is Wednesday 5th August.)

We would also like to encourage everyone to consider joining us for the conference dinner, which will take at The Grand Hotel on the evening of Thursday 30th July. The cost of the dinner is £65 and includes complementary drinks and a three-course meal. Sign up via the conference website for what promises to be a fantastic evening.

The conference excursion to Samuel Johnson’s Birthplace Museum at Lichfield on Saturday 1st August is also available for booking via the website at £15.

For all bookings, please see the website here.

Programmes

Thank you to those who have emailed us with notes about the programme and thank you for your patience as we work through these and get back to you. We attach revised versions. One final version of the programme will be published the week before the conference, when any further changes will be addressed.

Unfortunately, the online programme for Thursday 6th August is now full and we are unable to accept any requests to switch from in-person to online presentation.

We are very much looking forward to welcoming you to Birmingham at the end of July.

Andrew, Jessica, and Matthew
BARS 2026 Organising Team

BARS/BAVS Nineteenth-Century Matters Fellowship 2026 Awardee Announced

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Nineteenth-Century Matters is an initiative jointly run by the British Association for Romantic Studies and the British Association for Victorian Studies. Now in its tenth year, it is aimed at postdoctoral researchers who have completed their PhD, but who are not currently employed in a full-time academic post. Nineteenth-Century Matters offers unaffiliated early career researchers a platform from which to pursue their research, while also organising an academic event on a theme related to nineteenth-century studies or a workshop focused on an aspect of professionalisation.

BARS and BAVS are thrilled to announce that the Nineteenth-Century Matters Fellowship 2026 has been awarded to Dr Charlotte Wilson. Charlotte will receive mentorship from Dr Clare Horrocks and Dr Jamie Whitehead at Liverpool John Moores University.

Charlotte Wilson has recently completed her PhD in English Literature at the University of Oxford examining the representation of domestic caregivers in nineteenth-century medical literature and fictional novels. Her research considers how ideas about home caregiving were shaped in the medical and cultural imagination, drawing attention to the caregiver as an important agent in medical treatment and exploring how print culture wrestles with the pleasures and challenges of caregiving relationships. Charlotte’s broader research interests include the histories of domesticity and the family, disability studies, and the medical humanities.

For more information about this scheme and other funding opportunities, please visit our website: www.bars.ac.uk.

Dr Cleo O’Callaghan Yeoman
BARS Early Career Officer
12/06/26