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Anna Pilz

@apilz.bsky.social

Researcher Developer at Edinburgh | Researching Irish & Scottish writing & environmental history

2,030 Followers  |  243 Following  |  20 Posts  |  Joined: 18.10.2023  |  2.2595

Latest posts by apilz.bsky.social on Bluesky

Book cover for Discovering Britain and Ireland in the Romantic Period: Grand Tours.

Book cover for Discovering Britain and Ireland in the Romantic Period: Grand Tours.

πŸ“š πŸ₯‚ Congratulations to Dr Alison O’Byrne and Prof Jim Watt on the publication of their co-edited collection, Discovering Britain and Ireland in the Romantic Period: Grand Tours. Out now from CUP: www.york.ac.uk/eighteenth-c...

22.05.2025 11:55 β€” πŸ‘ 33    πŸ” 7    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0
CfP: Romantic Elements: Rocks, and Stones, and Soil, 1750–1850 – BARS Blog

CfP: Romantic Elements: Rocks, and Stones, and Soil, 1750–1850, Symposium at The University of Manchester, 25–26 June 2026. Deadline 30th January 2026. www.bars.ac.uk/blog/?p=6185

12.10.2025 15:11 β€” πŸ‘ 17    πŸ” 18    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0

The special issue of Eighteenth Century Studies on Coasts is now out - glad to be part of it with some thoughts about coasts and gardens in c18 Ireland #BlueHumanities #CoastalHistory #CoastalStudies 🌊

muse.jhu.edu/issue/55889

06.11.2025 06:28 β€” πŸ‘ 28    πŸ” 10    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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(Episode 97) Navigating Failure in Academia Quickly and easily listen to Research Culture Uncovered for free!

🎁 New #ResearchCultureUncovered Episode: Navigating Failure in Academia

Dr Taryn Bell explores the topic of failure in academia, featuring insights from Dr Johanna Stadlbauer, Prof Leila Jancovich, Dr Darcey Gillie @dfgillie.bsky.social & Dr Anna Pilz @apilz.bsky.social
πŸ”—

11.12.2024 12:00 β€” πŸ‘ 5    πŸ” 3    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 2

Yes. I can email it to you now.

13.06.2024 13:51 β€” πŸ‘ 3    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 2    πŸ“Œ 0
Irish Women’s Writing

Delighted to announce the CFP for the first special issue of Women’s writing devoted to Irish women writers that I’m editing with Amy Prendergast (TCD)!! Please share far and wide and consider submitting!

think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issu...

22.05.2024 13:57 β€” πŸ‘ 24    πŸ” 30    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0

❀️this!

18.03.2024 17:41 β€” πŸ‘ 0    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0

Awww now. Thanks, Cathryn. Much too kind. I miss our writing groups with @coastalhistory.bsky.social.

10.03.2024 19:06 β€” πŸ‘ 2    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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DEADLINE EXTENDED TO 31 MARCH -
for our 2024 Annual Conference New York 28-30 June - β€œTime in Nineteenth-Century Ireland”

01.03.2024 20:18 β€” πŸ‘ 4    πŸ” 9    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 1

Looking forward to "Romantic Making and Unmaking" @bars.bsky.social in Glasgow this summer. More coastal ponderings forthcoming from me! 🌊

10.03.2024 19:02 β€” πŸ‘ 3    πŸ” 1    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
Episode 1: Megan Kate Nelson Experiments with Structure – Drafting the Past

Thanks for sharing, Cathryn. Looking forward to listening. You might also be interested in a podcast called Drafting the Past! They quite frequently discuss writing trade books / writing for wider audiences. It's fabulous. Nelson was the very first contributor. :) draftingthepast.com/podcast-epis...

10.03.2024 18:52 β€” πŸ‘ 2    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
From debates between Brunonian, Hunterian, and Boerhavian conceptions of the body to indigenous and non-western practices, we invite scholarly essays that contest and complicate our understanding of the meanings, representations, and practices of health and/or medicine in the period.

This collection seeks proposals for 5,000-6,000 word essays that explore alternative conceptions, practices, and approaches to health in the long-eighteenth century. We expect that these essays will be accessible to a wide range of scholars from different disciplines and hope that they will be written in a way that makes them available to advanced undergraduate readers. 

We particularly invite essays that explore:
Indigenous and non-western traditions of health and healing
Home remedies and homeopathy
Prosthetics and other technological developments for atypical bodies
Intersections of race, imperial networks, and health
Literary renegotiations of health, illness, and care

Please submit 300-400 word abs

From debates between Brunonian, Hunterian, and Boerhavian conceptions of the body to indigenous and non-western practices, we invite scholarly essays that contest and complicate our understanding of the meanings, representations, and practices of health and/or medicine in the period. This collection seeks proposals for 5,000-6,000 word essays that explore alternative conceptions, practices, and approaches to health in the long-eighteenth century. We expect that these essays will be accessible to a wide range of scholars from different disciplines and hope that they will be written in a way that makes them available to advanced undergraduate readers. We particularly invite essays that explore: Indigenous and non-western traditions of health and healing Home remedies and homeopathy Prosthetics and other technological developments for atypical bodies Intersections of race, imperial networks, and health Literary renegotiations of health, illness, and care Please submit 300-400 word abs

Excited to be working with @miriamlw.bsky.social on this new collection. Please share and submit. #healthhums #c18 #histmed

26.02.2024 17:15 β€” πŸ‘ 15    πŸ” 8    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0

This is probably tangential to this but regarding book circulation & reading habits in the Southern Hemisphere see this fab project by UCD colleagues led by Porscha Fermanis: southhem.org/about-southh...

Incl a digital database
www.ucd.ie/southhem/cat...

03.02.2024 17:37 β€” πŸ‘ 0    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0

Thanks, Stephanie. Hopefully plenty for the interdisciplinary art historian there. :)

25.01.2024 12:38 β€” πŸ‘ 0    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0
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Although it's a "romantic" landscape, someone viewing this painting circa 1820 would have instantly recognized it as a modern, artificially planted, and highly managed woodland. In it, Friedrich portrays the beauty of the technocratic values of resource management.

Friedrich, Evening, c 1820

22.12.2023 11:30 β€” πŸ‘ 18    πŸ” 3    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0
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Issue #79 | Volumes and issues | Romanticism on the Net An open access journal devoted to British Romanticism since 1996

Just published - Scotland's Coastal Romanticisms, special issue of Romanticism and the Net edited by Penny Fielding and @apilz.bsky.social πŸ’¦πŸŒŠπŸ΄σ §σ ’σ ³σ £σ ΄σ Ώ

I have an article in this collection, 'Watery Romanticism: Walking and Sailing West with Keats'

ronjournal.openum.ca/articles/n79/

15.01.2024 14:50 β€” πŸ‘ 30    πŸ” 13    πŸ’¬ 4    πŸ“Œ 0
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Our special issue closes with Gerard Lee McKeever who places John Galt's cultural geography of the coastal region of Scotland within British imperial, European, and transatlantic contexts.

shorturl.at/fCS45

25.01.2024 10:03 β€” πŸ‘ 3    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0
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Katie Garner reads the female testimony of a coastal encounter w/ a mermaid as example of Donna Haraway's "situated knowledges". Curious to learn about its literary afterlife in satirical fiction? shorturl.at/knsIW

25.01.2024 10:02 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Chris Donaldson (Lancaster Uni) & James Maclaine (Natural History Museum, London) offer a "Tale of Two (Stuffed) Fish" to explore qs of knowledge production & taxonomies. They invite us "to rethink the geographical assumptions that often govern the study of national pasts."

shorturl.at/cgsS9

25.01.2024 10:01 β€” πŸ‘ 2    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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@claireconnolly.bsky.social sails from Port Patrick to Belfast w/ Keats to introduce us to 'the Duchess of Dunghill'. Archival research frames Connolly's reading of Keats's description of this impoverished Irish woman's body & her challenge to romantic aesthetics.

shorturl.at/mFS67

25.01.2024 10:00 β€” πŸ‘ 3    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Nigel Leask turns our attention to William Daniell's topographical art in a close reading of aquatints of the Isle of Skye & the West Highlands. He highlights that 'Coasts had never been so important.'

shorturl.at/hlGR8

25.01.2024 09:59 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Susan Oliver takes a close look at a familiar sight of the Scottish coast - the Bass Rock. She shows how natural philosophers, writers, & artists in the late C18th & early C19th 'embodied what we now regard as interdisciplinary approaches to knowledge'.

shorturl.at/tzEW8

25.01.2024 09:58 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Thanks to Marie Sklodowska-Curie funding, we were able to commission the wonderful Christina Riley to reflect on what Romanticism might mean to the C21st artist. Her illustrated essay on 'Fragments of Romance' is a tender piece on place. image caption below!

shorturl.at/vJR56

25.01.2024 09:57 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Warm thanks @iashedinburgh.bsky.social & SWINC Network for co-hosting the workshop that started conversations on a rainy February day 2 years ago! Such a treat to bring together those who have inspired my Scottish adventures. Lengthy acknowledgements here incl Katie Ritson, Katie Garner, Edel Semple

25.01.2024 09:56 β€” πŸ‘ 2    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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My intro explores "The Coastal Turn in Romantic Studies", connecting early C19th texts w/ today's artists, musicians, & writers incl David Cass, Karine Polwart & Roseanne Watt. Shout out to #CoastalStudies reading group @coastalhistory.bsky.social & @stevementz.bsky.social

shorturl.at/cyBGW

25.01.2024 09:54 β€” πŸ‘ 7    πŸ” 1    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0
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Excited to share the publication of "Scotland's Coastal Romanticisms", co-edited w/ Penny Fielding in the #OA journal Romanticism on the Net! Thanks to @mjrsangster.bsky.social & team for their great work on this issue. Thanks Marie Curie Actions for funding the project.

shorturl.at/iwKM0

25.01.2024 09:49 β€” πŸ‘ 27    πŸ” 12    πŸ’¬ 3    πŸ“Œ 0
Call for Papers – Romantic Making and Unmaking

The Call for Papers for BARS' 2024 Conference, Romantic Making and Unmaking, is now available. The conference will take place at the University of Glasgow from July 23rd-25th and online August 1st-2nd.
Deadline for proposals Friday January 19th 2024. Full details here: bars.ac.uk/conference20...

17.11.2023 10:20 β€” πŸ‘ 20    πŸ” 24    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 2

I hope you get to experience it as a writing retreat in future. Your research sounds really interesting! I've dipped my feet into Coastal Studies and hope our paths cross in real live some time.

02.11.2023 12:38 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 0    πŸ“Œ 0

It's such a special place, isn't it? I can imagine it has its appeal in all seasons. The fire place was a great asset in autumn. Possibly also helps with productivity if it's windy and wet. I'll certainly will try to get back at other times of the year. :)

31.10.2023 19:18 β€” πŸ‘ 1    πŸ” 0    πŸ’¬ 1    πŸ“Œ 0

@apilz is following 18 prominent accounts