elizabeth tilley
Elizabeth Tilley received her PhD in twentieth-century British fiction from the University of Toronto. She teaches courses on nineteenth-century British literature, writing by women, and book history. Her
research interests include Gothic fiction and the history of disposable literature. She is currently writing a monograph on nineteenth-century Irish periodicals.
Recent Publications:
Associate Editor and Contributor,
Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism (British Library and University of Ghent, 2010)
Editor (with M.A. Ní Mhainnín),
Canada: Texts and Contexts
(Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008)
Editor (with T. Foley, L. Pilkington, S. Ryder),
Gender and Colonialism (Galway University Press, 1995).
“The Green and the Gold: Publisher’s Series in Nineteenth-Century Ireland,” in
The Literature of the Publisher’s Series, ed. by John Spiers and Mary Hammond (Palgrave, 2011)
“Irish Victorian Antiquarianism and the Royal Irish Academy,” in
The Oxford History of the Irish Book,
Volume Four,
ed. James Murphy (Oxford University Press, 2011)
“Irish Periodicals in the Nineteenth-Century,” in
The Oxford History of the Irish Book, Volume Four, ed. James Murphy (Oxford University Press, 2011)
“Planned Obsolescence in Nineteenth-Century Publishing,” in
Print Networks, ed. by Catherine Armstrong and John Hinks (British Library and Oak Knoll Press, 2010)
“James Duffy” in
Oxford Companion to the Book, ed. Michael Suarez and H.R. Woudhuysen (Oxford University Press, 2009)
“Trading in Knowledge:
The Irish Builder
and Nineteenth-Century Journalism.” In
Littératures, Histoire des Idées, Images, Sociétés du Monde Anglophone 3.i (2005): 110-124.
“Science, Industry and Nationalism in
The Dublin Penny Journal.”
In Henson, Cantor, et al, eds.,
Culture and Science in Nineteenth-Century Media (Ashgate Press, 2004)
“Charles Lever.”
Dictionary of National Biography, V. 33. (Oxford University Press, 2004), 518-521.
“Stoker, Paris, and the Crisis of Identity.” In
Literature and History 10.2 (2001): 26-41.
“Charting Culture in
The Dublin University Magazine.” In Leon Litvak and Glenn Hooper, eds.
Ireland in the Nineteenth-Century: Regional Identity (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000),
58-66.
"Religion and Popular Culture in Charles Williams'
Descent Into Hell, in Patrick Quinn, ed.
Recharting the Thirties. Associated University Presses, 1996.