Explore the words cloud of the SouthHem project. It provides you a very rough idea of what is the project "SouthHem" about.
The following table provides information about the project.
Coordinator |
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN
Organization address contact info |
Coordinator Country | Ireland [IE] |
Project website | http://www.ucd.ie/southhem/ |
Total cost | 1˙487˙938 € |
EC max contribution | 1˙487˙938 € (100%) |
Programme |
1. H2020-EU.1.1. (EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC)) |
Code Call | ERC-2015-STG |
Funding Scheme | ERC-STG |
Starting year | 2016 |
Duration (year-month-day) | from 2016-09-01 to 2021-08-31 |
Take a look of project's partnership.
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1 | UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN | IE (DUBLIN) | coordinator | 1˙487˙938.00 |
SouthHem is a five-year research project designed to rethink and realign the nature and scope of British Romanticism by giving settler and indigenous literatures produced in the British-controlled Southern Hemisphere a more central role in defining the literary culture of the period 1783-1870. The project will carry out, for the first time, a detailed comparative analysis of these literatures and their interactions with British Romantic writing by focusing on case studies of encounter and transculturation in three transnational zones: “Zone 1” (Oceania): Australia and New Zealand; “Zone 2” (Southern Africa): the Cape Colony and Natal; and “Zone 3” (South-East Asia): Singapore, Java, and Malacca. The project has three inter-related aims: first, to consider the reciprocal transformations of literary themes, genres, standards, and forms in the British-controlled Southern Hemisphere and Britain; second, to rethink the ways in which nationhood, nationalism, and, in particular, national literature emerged in Britain and elsewhere by considering the global origins of nationalism; and third to problematise traditional periodisations of British Romanticism as beginning in the 1790s and ending in the 1830s. By radically expanding the type, provenance, and sample size of texts typically considered in studies of British Romanticism, this project will not only result in an important geographic, temporal, and conceptual rethinking of the field, but it will also provide a better understanding of how literary modernity emerged and developed outside of Europe and the Northern Hemisphere. As such, the project will facilitate larger cross-imperial and synthetic studies of the indigenous and settler literatures of the period.
year | authors and title | journal | last update |
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2019 |
Porscha Fermanis British Creoles: Nationhood, Identity, and Romantic Geopolitics in Robert Southey’s History of Brazil published pages: , ISSN: 0034-6551, DOI: 10.1093/res/hgz068 |
The Review of English Studies | 2019-10-29 |
2018 |
Sarah Comyn Literary Sociability on the Goldfields: The Mechanics’ Institute in the Colony of Victoria, 1854–1870 published pages: 447-462, ISSN: 1355-5502, DOI: 10.1093/jvcult/vcy052 |
Journal of Victorian Culture 23/4 | 2019-05-15 |
2018 |
Lara Atkin ‘The South African “Children of the Mistâ€â€™: The Bushman, the Highlander and the Making of Colonial Identities in Thomas Pringle\'s South African Poetry, 1825–1834 published pages: 199, ISSN: 2222-4289, DOI: 10.5699/yearenglstud.48.2018.0199 |
The Yearbook of English Studies 48 | 2019-05-15 |
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The information about "SOUTHHEM" are provided by the European Opendata Portal: CORDIS opendata.