About

Profile

I am currently undertaking doctoral research at Edge Hill University, working in collaboration with the British Library. My PhD project, which is supported financially by an Arts and Humanities Research Council Collaborative Doctoral Partnership award, aims to reassess orthodox determinations of success and failure in the nineteenth-century press by considering afresh the representative role of short-lived newspapers, especially in the London area, during the century.

Research Interests

My passion is the nineteenth-century print media, especially in the back-stories behind newspapers with particular emphasis on the swathes of short-lived titles (lasting five years or less in print). I’m curious about who was behind them, why they launched them, how they did it and the circumstances that led to their closure. In more general terms, though, my research interests are –

  • The industrial, political and societal culture of the long nineteenth century
  • The development of print culture in the nineteenth century, including the popular press
  • The digital humanities, especially as applied to archival research
  • The development of crime narratives, including detective fiction as well as factual/journalistic accounts of crime
  • Subversives and morally ambiguous characters in English cultural history and literature
  • Shakespeare’s work as drama and also how the cultural significance of his work developed, particularly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Representative Roles

To date I have had the honour of holding the positions of…

AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership Cohort Representative (2021-25)

Research Society for Victorian Periodicals (RSVP) Graduate representative on the Board (2023-25)

Edge Hill Graduate School representative 2022-23

At Edge Hill University

My university research (Pure) profile can be found here.

I am proud to be a member of the EHU Nineteen research centre

At the British Library

My collaborative PhD project owes its beginnings to the work of the News and Moving Image curators at the British Library, in particular the Heritage Made Digital project, which you can read more about here.

At the Ironbridge Gorge Museums Trust

Alongside my PhD studies, I was lucky enough to carry out a voluntary research placement with the Library and Archives Service at Ironbridge Gorge Museums Trust between October 2023 and March 2024, which involved selecting, digitising, transcribing and analysing original correspondence between women in the Darby family and wider Quaker networks with a view to providing materials for a forthcoming public exhibition on the lives of Quaker women in the 18th and 19th centuries.