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Phyllis Weliver

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Phyllis Weliver
Phyllis Weliver in London, March 2018
NationalityAmerican
OccupationAcademic

Phyllis Weliver is an American academic specializing in Victorian literature and music history.

Career

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Weliver completed first degrees at Oberlin College, Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and the University of Cambridge, and her doctoral studies at the University of Sussex.[1] She taught at Wilkes University, and is now Professor of English at Saint Louis University.

In 2011, Weliver became a lifetime Fellow of Gladstone's Library in Wales. She was Macgeorge Fellow at Melbourne Conservatorium of Music and Sugden Fellow at Queen's College, Melbourne in 2024.[2] In 2020, she was Visiting Research Fellow at the Faculty of Music, University of Cambridge. Weliver was a Visiting Scholar at St Catharine's College, Cambridge in 2020, as well as for two terms in the 2013-2014 academic year.[3] She received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship in 2015,[4] and a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend in 2004.[5]

Her publications focus on the nineteenth-century novel, Victorian poetry, and music in nineteenth-century Britain. In 2016, she began Sounding Tennyson, the first test case for adding sound to the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). She has also contributed to BBC Two Television[6] and to BBC Radio 3.[7]

Selected publications

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  • Reading Texts in Music and Literature of the Long Nineteenth Century, eds Phyllis Weliver and Katharine Ellis, Boydell & Brewer (2025)
  • Victorian Poetry, 60.2, Special issue on Victorian Poetry and the Salon, eds Linda K. Hughes and Phyllis Weliver (Summer 2022): 105–275
  • Mary Gladstone and the Victorian Salon: Music, Literature, Liberalism, Cambridge (2017)
  • Words and Notes in the Long Nineteenth Century, eds Phyllis Weliver and Katharine Ellis, Boydell & Brewer (2013)
  • The Musical Crowd in English Fiction, 1840–1910: Class, Culture and Nation, Palgrave Macmillan (2006)
  • The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry, ed. Phyllis Weliver, Ashgate (2005); Routledge (2016)
  • Women Musicians in Victorian Fiction, 1860–1900: Representations of Music, Science and Gender in the Leisured Home, Ashgate (2000); Routledge (2016)
  • Sounding Tennyson

References

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  1. ^ "Who's Who in Humanities: Phyllis Weliver". humanities.academickeys.com. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  2. ^ "'…with music loud and long': S.T. Coleridge's Liberalism, the Cambridge Apostles, and Gladstone's Essay Society". Wyvern News, Queen's College, The University of Melbourne. 2024.
  3. ^ "News of Members". The St Catharine's Magazine. 2015.
  4. ^ "Fellowships 2014". neh.gov.
  5. ^ Facts page, NEH Summer Stipends, June 2005.
  6. ^ Weliver, Phyllis (May 2009). Interviewee, The Birth of British Music: Mendelssohn – The Prophet, BBC Two Television Series. Presented by Charles Hazlewood. Produced by Francesca Kemp.
  7. ^ Weliver, Phyllis (March 2015). "Unsung Heroines of Classical Music: Mary Gladstone". The Essay, BBC Radio 3.