Nicola Wilson
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+44 (0) 118 378 5272
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Associate Professor
Areas of interest
My research focuses on literature in the modern period. I have broad interests in literary history, publishing, and print culture and my work is underscored by questions of feminism and class.
My first book, ), argued for the importance of home and domestic space in framing understandings of social class. It was reviewed in the TLS as an 'ambitious and welcome addition' to the study of working-class writing (March, 2016).
My second book, (publishing June 2025) explores the lives and literary tastes of Britain's first set of celebrity book club judges: Hugh Walpole, J. B. Priestley, Sylvia Lynd, Cecil Day-Lewis and Edmund Blunden. This has been funded by a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship. See for more on the project.
I am currently working on a new trade book for Reaktion on the history of publishing, Books for the People: A History of the Outsiders Who Made Modern Publishing.
I am co-director of the - a critical digital archive that reanimates the networks of C20 publishing. I am working with colleagues in UoR Special Collections and international library partners to make parts of the Hogarth Press and other publishers' archives more widely available. For more on MAPP see our recent project article, '’, Archival Sciences (2022)
I am lead editor of (Edinburgh University Press, 2024), eds. Wilson, Claire Battershill, Sophie Heywood, Daniela la Penna, Helen Southworth, Alice Staveley, Elizabeth Willson Gordon, Marrisa Joseph. This international companion highlights womens' diverse work within global book and magazine publishing.
Since 2011 I have worked to bring the writings of Lancashire mill woman back into circulation, as featured in (June 2016)
Prior to working at Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ I studied at the Universities of Warwick, Oxford and Durham.
Postgraduate supervision
I am currently supervising PhD projects on the Hogarth Press, E. M. Forster and Virginia Woolf, Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, publishing in 1922, Stanley Unwin, book piracy/copyright in India and working-class writing. I would be delighted to hear from prospective PhD students in any of my areas of research.
Teaching
I run Part 3 modules:
- Class Matters
- Publishing Cultures: Writers, Publics, Archives
and Part 2 module:
- The Business of Books
I co-convene the core Masters module Materiality & Textuality and optional modules Modern Literary Feminisms and Publishing and the Business of Books.
Research projects
I am co-director of the interdisciplinary and have specialist interests in using The Archive of British Publishing and Printing in my teaching and research. I have written on publishers' and digital archives, circulating libraries, colonial editions, literary censorship, reading patterns, and Leonard and Virginia Woolf's Hogarth Press.
In 2024, I was lead organiser of the Society for the History of Authorship, Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ, and Publishing's (SHARP) annual conference, with a theme of ''.
In 2017, I organised the 27th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf at the Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ to coincide with the centenary of the Hogarth Press. Hear me .
Recent research projects
Literature, Readers, and the Book Society Ltd., 1929-68
My current book explores the literary and cultural impact of the Book Society Ltd (1926-68). This was the first mail-order book club to operate in Britain and its influential Selection Committee (which included writers Hugh Walpole, J. B. Priestley, Clemence Dane and Edmund Blunden) played an important role in shaping mid-C20 tastes and reading patterns. Many well-known texts including Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca (1938), Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited (1945) and Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird (1960) were Book Society Choices. Whereas the impact of the American Book-of-the-Month Club is well-known, the British Book Society is under-researched and rarely features in histories of reading or literary and cultural analysis of the C20. My research uses archival records to demonstrate how this powerful distributor transformed literary culture, the literary marketplace and multi-national reading communities.
See also:
'Virginia Woolf, Hugh Walpole, the Hogarth Press, and the Book Society', English Literary History, 79:1, Spring 2012, 237-60
The Ethel Carnie Holdsworth series, General Editor
This series is reissuing the work of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth (1886-1962): Lancashire mill-woman, journalist, poet, writer for children, author of serial fiction, novelist and political activist. I republished her classic industrial novel, This Slavery (1925) with Trent Editions in 2011. In 2013 Kennedy & Boyd reissued Carnie Holdsworth's first novel published in book form, Miss Nobody (1913), believed to be one of the first novels published by a British woman of working-class background. Our next title is Helen of Four Gates (1917), with a critical introduction by Pamela Fox. This was Carnie Holdsworth's bestseller, and made into a silent film in 1922 by Cecil Hepworth. The next reissue is General Belinda (1924), with an introduction by Roger Smalley. This is an episodic tale of domestic service, with powerful scenes of life as a Prisoner of War during WW1.
I have given at The Working Class Movement Library in Salford, Blackburn and Great Harwood public libraries, and on BBC Radio Manchester and BBC Radio Lancashire.
Since 2023, Jenny Harper (PhD) has taken over editorial responsibility for this series.
See more:
Previous research projects
Home in British Working-Class Fiction (Ashgate, 2015)
The history of the working classes has often been written from the 'outside', with observers 'looking in' to the world of the inhabitants. My book engages with the long cultural history of this gaze and asks how 'home' is represented in the writing of authors who come from a working-class background. It explores the depiction of home as a key emotional and material site in working-class writing from the Edwardian period through to the early 1990s, with close readings of many works including The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (1914), Love on the Dole (1933), Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958), Second-Class Citizen (1974) and Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1985).
I recently contributed to a centenary film on Robert Tressell, 'Still Ragged: 100 Years of The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists' produced by independent film-makers (2014).
The Impact of Distribution and Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ Patterns on the History of the Novel in Britain, 1880-1940 (AHRC research project with Dr Andrew Nash and Professor Patrick Parrinder)
This project examined the relationship between book history and literary history by investigating whether and to what extent the novel as a literary and cultural form has been affected by changing patterns in the distribution and readership of texts.
The project drew heavily on the nationally designated Archive of British Publishers and Printers in UoR Special Collections. I looked at correspondence between publishers and authors and financial records in publishers' archives to examine the impact of important distributors and groups of readers (like private, circulating libraries such as W.H. Smiths and Boots Book-lovers' Library) on the writing and revision of literary texts.
My essay on 'Boots Book-Lovers' library, the Novel and James Hanley's The Furys (1935)' won the 2013 Justin Winsor essay award from the American Library History Round Table.
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Editorial roles
- Lead editor of The Edinburgh Companion to Women in Publishing, 1900-2020 (EUP. 2024)
- General editor of a new series of the works of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth with Kennedy & Boyd
- Co-editor, with Patrick Parrinder and Andrew Nash, of New Directions in the History of the Novel (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)
- Editor of The Book World: Selling and Distributing British Literature, 1900-40 (Brill, forthcoming)
- Special issue of the Raymond Williams Society journal, Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism, 5 (2007-8), 'Working Spaces, Working Lives' and, 18 (2020) 'Working-Class Writing'
Background
I am the Lead editor on 'Publishing and Book Culture' series strand on 'Women, Publishing, and Book Culture'.
I have peer reviewed book proposals and manuscripts for Bloomsbury, Routledge, and Palgrave Macmillan, and for the journals ELH, Literature and History, Contemporary Womens Writing, Book History, PMLA, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, and Enterprise and Society.