This site is neither endorsed, nor sponsored by, nor affiliated with Jacksonville Jaguars or NFL Properties LLC. James Robinson (71) OL - 2021 RS-FRESHMAN Made college debut in season-opening win over Bowling Green (9/2). Your California Privacy Rights/Privacy Policy.Anglia: Journal of English Philology 130: 34-53.
"Uneasy Orthodoxy": the Jesuits, the Risorgimento, and the Contexts of Joyce's First Reading of Dante. Nuvoletta and the "Dantellising Peaches": Dante, Femininity, and the Poetic Intertexts of Issy in "Finnegans Wake". With Etienne out for the year, it means that the jewel of the fantasy football community’s heart, James RB1SZN. The Ted Hughes Society Journal 7(2): 35-46. Fantasy managers likely went into panic mode on Tuesday morning when it was announced that Jaguars rookie running back Travis Etienne would miss the 2021 NFL Season with a Lisfranc injury. "The Sound of Dante's Language": An Alternative Medieval Tradition for Ted Hughes. In Dante in the Nineteenth Century: Reception, Canonicity, Popularization. "Purgatorio" in the "Portrait": Dante, Heterodoxy, and the Education of James Joyce. Roberts, Neil, Wormald, Mark & Gifford, Terry Palgrave Macmillan. For the first time since picking up the injury. "Our Chaucer": Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the Politics of Medieval Reading. Robinson initially suffered a bruised heel Week 8 at Seattle and missed a Week 9 game against the Bills, but hes been able to suit up in back-to-back contests, logging at least 58 percent of offensive snaps both times and totaling 30 touches for 122 yards from scrimmage and two rushing touchdowns. Gifford, Terry Cambridge University Press. The Haunting of Geoffrey Chaucer: Dante, Boccaccio, and the Ghostly Poetics of the Trecento. Joyce's Dante: Exile, Memory, and Community.
I teach widely across the undergraduate programme, convene the second-year seminar module 'Modern Poetry' and am currently supervising PhD projects on British, Irish and American poetry and would be delighted to hear from prospective research students intending to work on Joyce, Hughes, Dante, British and Irish poetry, twentieth-century literature more widely, or the afterlife of medieval literatures. Rooted in an exploration of the importance of Hughes’s regional identity as a Northern-English poet, the project draws upon extensive international archival research and will result in the monograph, Ted Hughes and Medieval Literature: ‘Deliberate Affiliation’. My current project, arising from my Leverhulme Fellowship, explores how the cultural hermeneutics and poetics of the British poet Ted Hughes were shaped by his engagement with a wide range of medieval English, European and Persian poetries. My first book, Joyce’s Dante: Exile, Memory, and Community (CUP, 2016) incorporated historical and political perspectives to present the encounter between James Joyce and the medieval Italian poet Dante Alighieri as a complex and contextually determined interaction which reflected Dante’s changing reputation, readership and textuality throughout the nineteenth century. The Haunting of Geoffrey Chaucer: Dante, Boccaccio, and the Ghostly Poetics of the Trecento. My research and teaching interests lie in twentieth-century literature, medieval literature, Romanticism and poetry and poetics more widely. I joined the Department of English Studies as Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in 2013 and have been teaching here ever since.