The Keats-Shelley Journal

FROM THE EDITOR

“To be still reading, still caring to read the Romantics in the next decade, would be future enough for me.”

Call for Papers: Keats-Shelley Journal Special Issue

E.P. Thompson: Romantic to Revolutionary

With the centenary of E.P. Thompson’s birth approaching in 2024, Keats-Shelley Journal seeks contributions for articles, notes, and other interventions engaging Thompson’s work and its legacies. Thompson’s writing, particularly his foundational book The Making of the English Working Class, has had a profound influence on the study of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century politics and culture. His particular influence on Romantic historicist methodologies has helped transform the field over the last half century, and his biography of writer, designer, and socialist activist William Morris has not only crucially shaped the reception of Morris and his work, but also presciently bridged the sometimes-limiting divide between scholarship of the Romantic and Victorian periods. Contributions could be focused on any aspect of Thompson’s writing or political action itself, but also—inspired by his commitment to making visible the experience of working people—on poets, writers, and activists who sought in various ways to advance social and economic justice for the working classes throughout the nineteenth century. This special issue seeks to honor and extend the journal’s ongoing commitment to a widening community of authors and readers, which has impelled the recent publication of our “50 Voices” flash-essays collection (vol. 69) as well as roundtables “Toward and Undisciplined and Anti-Racist Romanticism” (vol. 70) and “The Caribbean and Romanticism” (vol. 71).

Please submit contributions by May 1, 2024 or direct any questions to Jonathan Mulrooney, Editor, at ksjournal@holycross.edu.

Papers accepted after peer review will be included in a special section of Keats-Shelley Journal volume 74, to be published in Fall of 2024.

Call for Papers: Commonplacing

We invite you to participate in K-SAA’s 2023-2024 public outreach initiative (Sept. 2023-May 2025). Over the coming year, we will explore the ancient scholarly practice of commonplace book-keeping along with its vibrant modern descendent, scrapbooking. We are seeking contributions from teachers of grades 6-12, community college instructors, university faculty, librarians, and students, addressing the ways commonplacing has worked in your classrooms.

Keats-Shelley Journal+
Special Issue on Commonplacing and Commonplace Books

Co-Editors: Kacie L. Wills & Olivia Loksing Moy

The Newest K-SJ Issue


Keats-Shelley Journal Volume 71

2022

Read More ☞

An Interview with John Gardner

Shelley’s Steamship

The West Portrait of Percy Bysshe Shelley

An Interview with Andrew Stauffer

The Caribbean and Romanticism

An online exhibit featuring the work of scholars whose essays will appear in the forthcoming issue of the Keats-Shelley Journal.

Features, Interviews & More

Please check back here for some of our favorite essays as well as interviews with our authors on their scholarly and editing methods.

 

Subscribing to the Journal
+ Digital Access

To receive a subscription to the Journal, please become a member. Digital access is provided through Project Muse (beginning with volume 62, 2013) and a full series except the most recent three years through JSTOR.

 

Author Review & Submission Guidelines

Keats-Shelley Journal invites submissions that contribute significantly to the scholarly understanding of “second–generation” Romantic–period writers and their circles, including canonical and non–canonical figures, influences and afterlives. We welcome all critical methodologies and approaches. The journal aims to provide blind peer–reviewed decisions for authors within 8 to 12 weeks, and publication within six months to one year of acceptance. Submissions must be sent by email attachment to ksjournal@holycross.edu. Please read our House Style guide before submitting.

 

History of K-SJ

 Launched in 1952, the Keats-Shelley Journal is published (in print form: ISSN 0453-4387) annually by the Keats-Shelley Association of America. It contains articles on John Keats, Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley, Lord Byron, Leigh Hunt, and their circles of mutual influence and context–as well as K-SAA news, scholarly notes, and reviews.

 

K-SJ Board

Jonathan Mulrooney
Editor

Lindsey Eckert
Review Editor

Leila Walker
Review Editor

Julie Camarda
Editorial Assistant

Editorial Board:

Stephen C. Behrendt, Nora Crook, Stuart Curran, Hermione de Almeida, Paula Feldman, Denise Gigante, Nancy Moore Goslee, Jerrold E. Hogle, Steven E. Jones, Mark Kipperman, Beth Lau, Jerome J. McGann, Anahid Nersessian, Alan Richardson, Emily Rohrbach, Grant F. Scott, Andrew M. Stauffer, Neil Vickers

Previous Editors:

Mable A. E. Steele, Daniel Whitten, Rae Ann Nager, Stuart Curran, Steven Jones, Peter Manning, and Jeanne Moskal.