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CARDIFF CORVEY: READING THE ROMANTIC TEXT [ISSN 1471-5988]

ISSUE 12 (SUMMER 2004)

The latest issue of 'Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text' is now
available, and contains the following new material:

ARTICLES & REPORTS
Four Articles and Reports by various contributors, both within and without
Cardiff University:

1. Imke Heuer (University of York) discusses the intertextual relationship
between Joshua Pickersgill’s little-known novel, The Three Brothers, and
Byron’s verse-drama fragment, The Deformed Transformed.

2. Donald Kerr analyses the relationship Dr John Wolcot (the satirist ‘Peter
Pindar’) and the publishing industry.

3. John Steele provides new biographical information about the Gothic
novelist Anne Ker and her husband John.

4. This issue also sees the fourth and final Update to The English Novel,
1800–1829: A Bibliographical Survey of Prose Fiction Published in the
British Isles, including fuller information on the identities of the
novelists Charles Sedley and Mary Anne Radcliffe/Louisa Bellenden Ker.

Beginning with Issue 11, users will now be able to download entire issues of
Cardiff Corvey in a new print-optimised Acrobat format, in addition to
downloading the individual articles. Over the coming months, we shall be
retrospectively adding this facility to the website, working backwards to
Issue 1.

PROJECT UPDATES
You can also find out the latest information about various Romantic-era
projects running at Cardiff University, at the Centre for Editorial and
Intertextual Research, notably our Database of British Fiction, 1800-29 and
Oxford Encyclopaedia of British Fiction, 1789*1836.

Full access is also available to articles, reports, and resources published
in previous issues of 'Cardiff Corvey'.

You can visit 'Cardiff Corvey' @ www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey

Regards,

Anthony Mandal (editor)

*********************
CALL FOR PAPERS: CARDIFF CORVEY: READING THE ROMANTIC TEXT 12 (June 2004)

The editors of Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text invite submissions
to the online journal run by the Centre for Editorial and Intertextual
Research (CEIR) at Cardiff University. Cardiff Corvey is a refereed
periodical devoted to the study of Romantic-era literature, with a
particular emphasis on fiction of the period 1770-1830. Articles concerned
with less well-known novelists and texts, publishing history relating to
this period, and bibliographical and editorial issues are especially
welcome.

Papers of 5,000-8,000 words can be submitted via e-mail (as attachments) or
on disk in any of the popular word-processing (e.g. MS Word, Wordperfect,
Word Pro, RTF) or HTML formats: for the preferred presentation of articles,
please consult the MHRA guidelines. Shorter notices and bibliographical
checklists of relevance will also be considered. Submissions should be made
by the 1 November 2004 in order to make issue 13.

Any essays supplied for prospective publication on this site will be
seriously considered, undergoing a process of assessment by members of the
Cardiff Corvey Advisory Board: Peter Garside (Chair, Cardiff); Jane Aaron
(Glamorgan), Stephen Behrendt (Nebraska), Emma Clery (Sheffield Hallam), Ed
Copeland (Pomona College), Caroline Franklin (Swansea), Isobel Grundy
(Alberta), David Hewitt (Aberdeen), Claire Lamont (Newcastle), Robert Miles
(Stirling), Rainer Schöwerling (Paderborn), Christopher Skelton-Foord
(Bodleian), Kathryn Sutherland (Oxford).