The Arts and Humanities Research Council and Royal Society of Edinburgh will host a colloquium on literary commerce at the University of Edinburgh on 20 July 2015. (Published 10 December 2014) The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) will host a colloquium on literary commerce at the University of Edinburgh in July 2015. Event descriptionThe past twenty years have witnessed the emergence of new resources and new perspectives on the literary culture of Enlightenment in Britain.Along with our interpretations of what it meant to be an author, reader, printer, and publisher, we are reflecting on the ways in which the arrival of new and powerful research tools have shifted our concerns—as readers, writers, teachers, researchers.This Colloquium brings together historians from disciplines across the Humanities to consider the literary culture of the eighteenth-century trade in ideas. Event details Monday 20 July 2015, 8.00amRaeburn room,Old College,University of Edinburgh How to find usKey speakersThe 50-minute sessions will feature speakers from across the United Kingdom and North America.SpeakerTitleProf Barbara Benedict (Trinity College, United States of America)"The pen has always been in their hands:" Representations of authors and audiences in 18th century British literatureDr Adam Budd (University of Edinburgh)Andrew Millar and the making of the British literary canonProf Viccy Coltman (University of Edinburgh)Press, pen and portrait: Sir Walter Scott and the physiognomy of romanticismDr Alison Duncan (University of Edinburgh)'Fame and ye testimony of the judicious and sensible of all nations': promoting the public authorProf John Feather (Loughborough University)Imprints revisited: interpretations and insightsProf Matthew Grenby (Newcastle University)Juvenile AntiquarianismDr Catherine Jones (University of Aberdeen)Apollo Mathematicus: Archibald Pitcairne and the Virtuoso Culture of the Early Scottish EnlightenmentDr Tom Mole (University of Edinburgh)Celebrity and anonymity in the long 18th centuryProf Pamela Perkins (University of Manitoba, Canada)All the prejudices of foreigners: creating place in early 19th century travel journalsProf James Raven (University of Cambridge)John Nourse and his Enlightenment Bookshop on the Strand, 1729-1780Prof Isabel Rivers (Queen Mary University of London)Religious publishing and religious booksProf Richard B. Sher (NJIT/Rutgers University, United States of America)'A monstrous list of expences and deductions': new light on the publication of Boswell's Life of JohnsonDr Mark Towsey (University of Liverpool)Who did they think they were? Manuscript notes and readers sses of the past in Georgian BritainRegister onlinePlease register to attend via our online booking system.Register online via EventbriteApply for a travel bursaryWith the kind support of the Bibliographical Society, we have funds for two PhD travel bursaries.If you are a PhD candidate working on any aspect of eighteenth-century studies or book history and wish to apply for travel funds, please contact Adam Budd at the email below, who will provide an application form.Further informationAll enquiries can be directed to Dr Adam Budd at the University of Edinburgh. Dr Adam Budd School of History, Classics and Archaeology University of Edinburgh Contact details Email: adam.budd@ed.ac.uk This article was published on 2024-08-01