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Dr. Caroline Winter

Dr. Caroline Winter
English
Status

Recent PhD

Contact
Credentials

BA, MA (UofT)

Area of expertise

British Romantic literature, Gothic literature, literature and economics, women’s writing, book history, digital humanities, Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, Scottish studies, digital editions, text analysis, web ontologies

Dissertation Title: Gothonomics: Romantic Gothic literature in Britain and Economic Revolution (tentative)

Supervisor: Dr. Robert Miles

I am a PhD candidate studying British Romantic literature and digital humanities. My SSHRC-funded dissertation investigates intersections between Gothic literature and Romantic-era economic thought. I represented the Humanities at UVic’s 3MT finals in 2016 and enjoy sharing my work with the community and at national and international conferences.

I am completing the Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (LATHE) certificate and have taught courses in academic reading and writing and nineteenth-century British literature. My teaching interests include digital pedagogy, open scholarship, and teaching beyond the literary canon.

Scholarly community and collaboration are important to me, and I have served as president of the at UVic and as a postgraduate representative for the . I am currently a co-chair of the and the Open Scholarship Facilitator in the .

Recent Scholarly Activity

Publications

Millar Usiskin, Jana, Christine Walde, and Caroline Winter. Practice to Theory: A Forum on The Future of Modernist Digital Humanities, edited by Shawna Ross. Modernism/modernity Print Plus, vol. 3, cycle 2, 7 Aug. 2018.

Lumen, vol. 37, 2018, pp. 123–134.

Women’s Writing, vol. 25, no. 1, 28 Nov., 2017, pp. 116–118.

Conference Papers

“Frankenstein Economies and Gothic Economics, 1818–2018,” IGA Joint-Sponsored Panel, ACCUTE annual conference, Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities, University of British Columbia, 1–4 June 2019.

“Buried Alive in Northanger Abbey; or, Henry Tilney is Wrong,” North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR) annual conference: Open, Brown University, 22–25 June