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Robert Gavin Hampson

Robert Gavin Hampson FEA FRSA (born 1948) is a British poet and academic. Hampson was born and raised in Liverpool, studied in London and Toronto and settled in London. He is currently Research Fellow at the Institute for English Studies, University of London and Emeritus Professor at Royal Holloway. He was also Visiting Professor at the University of Northumbria (2018-21). He is a member of the Poetics Research Centre and the Centre for GeoHumanities at Royal Holloway. He is well known for his contributions to contemporary innovative poetry and the international study of Joseph Conrad.

Early life and education

Robert Gavin Hampson was born in Liverpool in 1948. He studied English literature at King's College London between 1967 and 1970 and was awarded a Commonwealth Scholarship to complete a master's degree at University of Toronto.[1] He then returned to King's College, London, in 1971 where he completed a PhD on Joseph Conrad.

Poetry

During the 1970s he co-edited the poetry magazine Alembic with Peter Barry (poet) and Ken Edwards and was a key figure in the second generation of the British Poetry Revival.[2] His poetry was published in Cid Corman's Origin, Alan Davies's 100 Posters, and in a range of other magazines during the 1970s. It was also included in the Arts Council's anthology, New Poetry 3 (1977). His work as one of the editors of Alembic has received attention in two books by Wolfgang Gortschacher - Little Magazine Profiles: The Little Magazines in Great Britain, 1939-1993 (University of Salzburg, 1993) and Contemporary Views on the Little Magazine Scene (Poetry Salzburg, 2000)- and, more recently, in an interview (with Ken Edwards) by Sophie Seita in the magazine mimeo mimeo (2014). This has now been republished as 'transatlantic axis of alembic' in Jacket2.[3]

His best-known work is probably his early long-poem, Seaport (Pushtika, 1995; Shearsman, 2008), which has been written about by Peter Barry, Andrew Duncan, Amy Cutler, Neal Alexander and others. Barry's extended analysis of Seaport begins by noting its 'extensive use of "incorporated data" of various kinds', ranging from various literary sources (including works by Defoe, Melville, Hawthorne and Conrad) to 'historical accounts of the growth and development of the port, of the history of race relations in the city, newspaper accounts of local events and local guidebooks' (Contemporary British Poetry and the City, p.159). He concludes by describing this long poem as 'a large-scale vehicle of surprising flexibility which can accommodate the overtly political, the archival-historical and radically pared-down versions of poetry's more familiar affective modes' (Contemporary British Poetry and the City, p.162). Andrew Duncan similarly suggested that Seaport was 'a major work, where the recovery of pure facts without explanatory annotation allows the build up of a new understanding on the large scale' (The Council of Heresy, p. 29). Cutler argues that, in this work, Hampson 'shows the conflict between the different social typologies of space in the seaport'.[4] Neal Alexander draws attention to the poem's demonstration of how 'multiple channels of traffic have shaped the port of Liverpool over time' - the cotton trade, the slave trade, Irish emigration.[5] In the post 1939 section of the CUP English Literature in Context, John Brannigan describes Seaport as 'an important book for its extraordinary poetic account of the history and development of Liverpool'.[6]More recently, Phillip Jones has included discussion of Seaport in his 2018 Nottingham University PhD, 'Rewriting the Atlantic archipelago: Modern British poetry at the coast'.

Hampson's poetry has gone through various stages. The early work explored open-field poetics and what Peter Barry has called 'content-specific' poetics (in Seaport), but also treated text in How Nell Scored (1976) and 'on the trail' (1976). He subsequently explored self-conscious narrative and montage in his Godard-inspired film poems 'one plus one' (1980) and 'handy narratives' (1985); and a phrasal poetics (derived from Lyotard's 'The Differend' and his own critical engagement with the work of Adrian Clarke) in a human measure (1989) and unicorns: 7 studies in velocity (1989) - and subsequent volumes. This part of his career is represented in Assembled Fugitives (2001); some of the critical engagement with Clarke is evidenced in his essay 'Producing the Unknown' in New British poetries (1994); and Clarke, in turn, has discussed 'a human measure' and 'unicorns' in 'Robert Hampson and a Neo-Formalist Moment', his contribution to For Robert (2017), edited by Redell Olsen. More recent work by Hampson has been engaged in exploring the resources of the sonnet. His poetry has been translated into German, Italian and Rumanian. See, for example, Wolfgang Gortschacher & Ludwig Laher, So Also Ist Das: Eine Zweisprachige Anthologie Britischer Gegenswartslyrik (Haymon-Verlag, 2002), and the translation of the sequence 'Lou Mistrau' in the Italian journal Soglie (August 2014).

In 2012, his collection Reworked Disasters (knivesforksandspoons press) was long-listed for the Forward Prize. In his comprehensive study of the sonnet in English, The Sonnet (Oxford University Press, 2019), Stephen Regan discusses Reworked Disasters in relation to sonnets by Ken Edwards and Tony Lopez as examples of the contemporary avant-garde sonnet. He describes Hampson's 'serious political focus on global warfare, imperialism, and torture' in this 'linguistically discontinuous' fourteen-sonnet sequence. (The Sonnet, p. 382).Hampson's more recent work includes 'love's damage', which was published in the Surrey Poetry Festival Magazine (21.05.11), edited by Amy De'Ath and Jonty Tiplady;[7] 'sonnets 4 sophie' first published in Veer Vier (September 2013),[8] while an explanation of colours was reviewed by Edmund Hardy and Melissa Flores-Borquez in Intercapillary Space[9] and out of sight (crater, 2012) and Liverpool (hugs &) kisses, his 2014 collaboration with Robert Sheppard, are reviewed on the 'other room' website.[10] In their review of out of sight, the Institute of Electronic Crinolines referred to 'The artificial highs of Robert Hampson's noir on overload' and described the text as evoking 'a knowingly flimsy fantasy of what resistance to all forms of identification might be like'.[11] More recently, he has contributed to Robert Sheppard's European Union of Imaginary Author's project through a collaboration with Sheppard. This collaboration is included in Robert Sheppard (ed.) Twitters for a Lark: Poetry of the European Union of Imaginary Authors (Shearsman, 2017).

His sequence 'Volupte: 22 Constructions for Ewald Matare' is included in the Spring 2021 issue of Long Poem Magazine,[12] and the volume Covodes 1-19 was published in December 2021 by Artery editions.[13] Some of the Covodes have been published in Molly Bloom [14] and junction box,[15] and a recording of a performance of some of the Covodes (with accompaniment by cellist Jo Levi) at the 2021 Surrey Poetry Festival is available at vimeo.com/556947245. A full recording of Covodes 1-19 and Levy's 'Suite for Solo Cello' is available at www.arteryeditions.bandcamp.com.In a review of recent poetry, Billy Mills (poet) has commented on Covodes: 'Hampson folds his multiple concerns into a single nexus with the multiple challenges that confront this ambition for equity that should underpin our society ... Against which we see the prevailing influence of money and power'.[16] A selection from Covodes 1-19 (translated into Italian by Marzia Dati) was published in Soglie, XXII, 1-2 (April–August 2020), and an interview with Robert Hampson about Covodes 1-19 by Belinda Gianessi was published in the Tears in the Fence blog (http://tearsinthefence.com/blog).

Scholarship

Poetry criticism and creative writing

Hampson taught at Royal Holloway, University of London, from 1973, and was Professor of Modern Literature there from 2000. From 2016 to 2019, he was Distinguished Teaching and Research Fellow in the Department of English at Royal Holloway. He is currently Research Fellow at the Institute for English Studies, University of London and Emeritus Professor at Royal Holloway. He was also Visiting Professor at the University of Northumbria (2018-21).

He has contributed to the critical discourse about recent and contemporary poetry - most visibly through a series of co-edited books: The New British poetries: The scope of the possible (Manchester University Press, 1993), co-edited with Peter Barry, which was described as a pioneering work in the field;[17] Frank O'Hara Now: New Essays on the New York Poet (Liverpool University Press, 2010) co-edited with Will Montgomery;[18] Clasp: Late modernist poetry in London in the 1970s (Shearsman, 2016), co-edited with Ken Edwards; and The Allen Fisher Companion (Shearsman, 2020), co-edited with Cris Cheek.[19] In their essay for The Year's Work in English Studies, K. O'Hanlon describes Clasp as 'essential reading for anyone interested in getting to grips with post-war poetry and the avant garde'.[20] Lyndon Davies begins his lengthy review of The Allen Fisher Companion in the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetics (13 [1]) with the observation: 'Most of whatever it is you might look for in a companion to the work of a poet / artist as multifariously challenging as Allen Fisher, this book supplies in spades'.[21]

During his time as head of the Department of English, Hampson founded the MA in poetic practice at Royal Holloway, University of London, with Redell Olsen in 2002 and the MA in creative writing with Andrew Motion in 2003.[22] With Helen Carr and others, he was instrumental in bringing about the regulation change which enabled the introduction of creative writing into the University of London PhD. He has regularly taught on the poetic practice pathway, and he was director of the MA in creative writing for 2016–17. Graduates of the creative writing programme whom he taught include the novelists Tahmima Anam, Adam O'Riordan, Anna Whitwham and Sarah Perry and the poets Robert Selby and Declan Ryan.[23] Graduates of the poetic practice programme whom he taught include Elizabeth-Jane Burnett,[24] Prudence Chamberlain,[25] Becky Cremin,[citation needed] Frances Kruk,[citation needed] Ryan Ormonde,[citation needed] Jooyeon Park,[26] Nisha Ramayya,[27]Sophie Robinson,[citation needed] Karenjit Sandhu [28] and Steven Willey.[citation needed]

He has also made a significant contribution to innovative poetry in London as the organiser of events and conferences and as the convenor and curator of two important seminar series. In the 1970s he organised a short reading series, Future Events, at The White Swan in Covent Garden with Ken Edwards and Mike Dobbie. At the end of the 1970s, he and Erik Vonna-Michel organised three one-day 'Saturday Courses' at Lower Green Farm: Bob Cobbing, Allen Fisher and Eric Mottram were the subjects of the different days. (See Ken Edwards's account of Lower Green Farm in Clasp and in his memoir Wild Metrics.) In the 1980s, he organised two conferences on Contemporary innovative Poetry at the Centre for English Studies in the University of London Senate House, and, in the 1990s, he facilitated the six SVP Colloquia that took place there (organised by Lawrence Upton). In 1999, he was asked to take over the TALKS series that Bob Perelman had established at King's College, London, during Pereleman's year as a visiting professor there. Hilda Bronstein has given an account of the early years of the London TALKS series in How2[29] The TALKS series continued for some years at King's under Hampson's direction and then moved to Birkbeck College, University of London, where Redell Olsen and Frances Presley were co-organisers with him. It was superseded by the Contemporary Innovative Poetry Research Seminar, which he runs with Amy Evans Bauer at the University of London Institute for English Studies. In 2004, he set up the Runnymede International Literary Festival in collaboration with Royal Holloway and Runnymede Borough Council. He has continued to be the Festival Director. More recently, the Festival transferred some of it activities to Central London as 'Runnymede in London' through collaboration with the Centre for Creative Collaboration (c4cc),[30] which also provided the venue for Polyply, the event series run by Redell Olsen, Will Montgomery and Kristen Kreider.[31]

In 2010–11, he collaborated with the Palestinian visual artist, Leena Nammari, on a concertina book, The Long View, as part of the Beyond Text project.[32] During 2014, he curated an event series, Amid the Ruins, with Carrie Foulkes at the Daniel Blau Gallery, Hoxton Square, London.[33] In 2017, on the occasion of his retirement from full-time teaching, Redell Olsen edited For Robert: An Anthology (RHUL Poetics Research Centre / The Institute of the Electric Crinolines).[34]

Joseph Conrad Scholarship

He has also pursued a parallel career as a Conrad scholar and editor with three monographs on Joseph Conrad: Joseph Conrad: Betrayal and Identity (1992), Cross-Cultural Encounters in Joseph Conrad's Malay Fiction (2000) and Conrad's Secrets (2013). Conrad's Secrets received the first-place prize for the Adam Gillon Award (2015) from the Joseph Conrad Society of America for the best recent work on Joseph Conrad. In 2017, he received the Ian P. Watt Award from the Joseph Conrad Society of America for excellence in Conrad studies. Previous recipients of this life-long achievement award include Norman Sherry and J. Hillis Miller.[35] He has subsequently been awarded the third-place prize for the Adam Gillon Award (2018) for the collection of essays, Conrad and Language (Edinburgh U. P. 2016), which he co-edited with Katherine Isobel Baxter. In 2020, he published a critical biography, Joseph Conrad, in the Critical Lives series from Reaktion Books. Maya Jasanoff describes it as 'insightful, judicious and elegant': 'Joseph Conrad marvellously distils a lifetime of learning by one of the world's leading Conrad scholars. This is the best short guide to Conrad's life available'. His most recent publication is The Reception of Joseph Conrad in Europe (Bloomsbury, 2022), co-edited with Veronique Pauly.

He was editor of The Conradian (1989–96) and co-edited Conrad and Theory with Andrew William Gibson (Rodopi, 1998). He also edited various Conrad texts – Lord Jim (1986), Victory (1989), Heart of Darkness (1995) – for Penguin books, as well as Rudyard Kipling's Something of Myself (1987) and Soldiers Three/ In Black & White (1993) and Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines (2000).[36] His edition of Heart of Darkness for Penguin included the first accurate transcription of Conrad's 'Congo Diary' and was the first to use the 'Carte des routes de portage' (1894), which was supplied to Belgian State Officials for the journey up-river from Matadi, to annotate Conrad's account of the same journey, which he undertook four years earlier. He also edited Nostromo and co-edited (with Andrew Purssell), Ford Madox Ford's Parade's End and Conrad's Lingard Trilogy for Wordsworth. (A short lecture by him on Heart of Darkness is available on https://www.massolit.io/lecturers/119. A longer lecture is available on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ni4qpFdyG4. The lecture he gave on 'Joseph Conrad Today' for the launch of the Joseph Conrad Fellowship in Warsaw in December 2021 is available on YouTube: youtube.com/watch?v=NeE6Ugg7fEU. And the lecture he gave to PUNO (The Polish University Abroad) on 'Conrad, Colonialism and Africa' in March 2022 is also available on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMqUe1YtoYw.) A lecture he gave in March 2022 for St Mary's University on 'Joseph Conrad in the Modern World: Conrad and Africa', discussing 'Heart of Darkness and 'An Outpost of Progress' is also available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrUiOo2dPds. He co-edited (with Helen Chambers) Guy de Maupassant's Mademoiselle Perle and other stories (riverrun, 2020), a selection from the translations made by Elsie Martindale and Ada Galsworthy, which were first published in 1903 and 1904 respectively. Conrad was in touch with both Elsie Martindale and Ada Galsworthy about their translations. Hampson was elected Chair of the Joseph Conrad Society(UK) in 2015.[37]

He was an adviser for ''Hanyut'' (film), a film by the prize-winning Malaysian director U-Wei Haji Saari, based on Conrad's first novel, Almayer's Folly.[38] He also appears in the 2018 TCM documentary, El sueno imposible de David Lean, an exploration of David Lean's long-held plan to adapt Conrad's masterpiece Nostromo as a film <https://youtube.com/watch?v-O2eDIM5XnOU[permanent dead link]> and in Sladami Conrada (In the footsteps of Conrad) on Polish television. In 2019, the Polish television series Chuligan Literacki (Literary Hooligan) devoted two successive programmes to his work on Joseph Conrad. This series, on TVP Kultura, presented fifteen programmes on 'the most outstanding English writers, philosophers and historians', and included programmes on Quentin Skinner, Antony Beevor and others. The programmes are available on vod.tvp.pl/video/chuligan-literacki.roberthampson-cz-1,40566562.

Academic service

In addition, he has undertaken various forms of service to the academic community. He was a panel member for the RAE 2008 and the REF 2014. He was also a panel member for the Rumanian and Hong Kong RAEs. He was a member of the QAA Benchmarking Group for Creative Writing and is currently a member of the Practice Research Advisory Group;[39] the European Science Foundation Panel of Experts; and the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission Advisory Committee.

Personal life

His first wife was the Bengali children's writer Sibani Raychaudhuri. In Kolkotta, her early work was published in the children's magazine Shondesh edited by Satyajit Ray. In London she was on the Committee of the South Asian Literary Society (founded by Ranjana Ash) and a member of the Asia Women Writers' Collective.[40] She published translations of Bengali poetry, produced jointly with Hampson, in the London Magazine and the TLS; short stories in Spare Rib; and poems and stories in the two anthologies produced by the Collective: Write of Way (The Women's Press, 1988) and Flaming Spirit (Virago, 1994).[41] Hampson later married the George Eliot critic Gerlinde Roder-Bolton.

Fictionalised appearances

He appears as 'a Conrad specialist in London by the name of X' in Jenny Diski's Skating to Antarctica (1997), and he and his colleague Andrew Gibson (Andrew William Gibson) also make an appearance (lightly disguised) in Adam Roberts's 2003 science-fiction novel, Polystom.[42]

Publications

Poetry

  • Degrees of Addiction (London: Share, 1975).
  • How Nell Scored (London: Poet & Peasant, 1976).
  • A Necessary Displacement (Orpington: Pushtika, 1978).
  • A Feast of Friends (Durham: Pig Press, 1982).
  • A City at War (London: Northern Lights, 1985).
  • (with David Miller) Nevsky Prospekt (Dublin: hardPressed poetry, 1988).
  • A human measure (Dublin: hardPressed poetry, 1989).
  • Unicorns: 7 Studies in Velocity (London: Pushtika, 1989).
  • (with Gerlinde Roder-Bolton) Dingo (London: Pushtika Press, 1994).
  • Seaport: interim edition (Woking: Pushtika Press, 1995)..
  • (with Gerlinde Roder-Bolton), higher densities: a new hampshire sampler (Woking: Pushtika Press, 1996).
  • C for Security (Woking: Pushtika Press, 2001).
  • Pentimento (Pushtika Press, 2005).
  • out of sight (Crater Press, 2012.)
  • Assembled fugitives: selected poems, 1973–1998 (Exeter: Stride Press, 2001).
  • Seaport (Shearsman, 2008).
  • an explanation of colours (Veer Books, 2010).
  • (with Leena Nammari) The Long View (2011).
  • Reworked Disasters (kfs,2012).
  • (with Robert Sheppard) Liverpool (Hugs &) Kisses (ship of fools / pushtika, 2015).

Critical Work

Monographs:

  • Joseph Conrad: Betrayal and Identity (Macmillan, 1992).
  • Cross-Cultural Encounters in Joseph Conrad's Malay Fiction (Palgrave, 2000).
  • Conrad's Secrets (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
  • Joseph Conrad (Reaktion Books, 2020).

Co-edited Volumes:

  • (Co-edited with Peter Barry, New British poetries: The scope of the possible (Manchester university Press, 1993).
  • (Co-edited with Tony Davenport), Ford Madox Ford: A Re-Appraisal (Rodopi, 2002).
  • (Co-edited with Max Saunders), Ford Madox Ford's Modernity (Rodopi, 2003).
  • (Co-edited with Will Montgomery), Frank O'Hara Now (Liverpool University Press, 2010).
  • (Co-edited with Ken Edwards), Clasp: late modernist poetry in London in the 1970s (Shearsman, 2016).
  • (Co-edited with Katherine Isobel Baxter), Conrad and Language (Edinburgh University Press, 2016).
  • (Co-edited with cris cheek), The Allen Fisher Companion (Shearsman, 2020).
  • (Co-edited with Veronique Pauly), The European Reception of Joseph Conrad (Bloomsbury, 2022).

Editions

  • Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim (edited by Cedric Watts; textual editing by Hampson), Penguin Books, 1986.
  • Rudyard Kipling, Something of Myself (with an Introduction by Richard Holmes), Penguin Books, 1987.
  • Joseph Conrad, Victory, Penguin Books, 1989.
  • Rudyard Kipling, Soldiers Three / In Black and White (with an Introduction by Salman Rushdie), Penguin Books, 1993.
  • Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness with The Congo Diary, Penguin Books, 1995.
  • Joseph Conrad, Nostromo (with an Introduction and Notes by Hampson), Wordsworth Classics, 2000.
  • Rider Haggard, King Solomon's Mines (with a Preface by Giles Foden), Penguin Books, 2007.
  • Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (edited by Owen Knowles with The Congo Diary edited by Hampson), Penguin Books, 2007.
  • Joseph Conrad & Ford Madox Ford, The Nature of a Crime, ReScript Books, 2012.
  • Ford Madox Ford, Parade's End (with an Introduction by Robert Hampson and Andrew Purssell), Wordsworth Books, 2013.
  • Joseph Conrad, Victory (with a Preface by John Gray and 1989 Introduction by Hampson), Penguin Books, 2015.
  • Joseph Conrad, The Lingard Trilogy (Introduction by Andrew Purssell, Notes by Hampson), Wordsworth Classics, 2016.
  • Joseph Conrad, Almayer's Folly (Ukrainian translation; Introduction by Hampson), Tempora, 2018.
  • Joseph Conrad, The Secret Agent (Ukrainian translation; Introduction by Hampson), Tempora, 2018.
  • Guy de Maupassant, Mademoiselle Perle and other stories (Preface by Helen Chambers and Hampson), riverrun, 2020.

e-books

Sounds Anglo-American: Robert Vas Dias interviewed by Robert Hampson, http://www.argotistonline.co.uk/SOUNDS%20ANGLO-AMERICAN.pdf

References

  1. ^ Hampson, Robert. http://www.rhul.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/robert-hampson. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  2. ^ Miller/ Price, David/ Richard (2006). British Poetry Magazines 1914–2000. The British Library. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-7123-4941-3.
  3. ^ jacket2.org/interviews/transatlantic-axis-alembic
  4. ^ Amy Cutler, 'Language Disembodied: The Coast and Forest in Modern British Poetry', Ph.D. Royal Holloway, University of London, 2017, p.166.
  5. ^ Neal Alexander, 'The Poetry of Ports' in Neal Alexander and David Cooper (eds), Poetry and Geography: Space and Place in Postwar Poetry, Liverpool University Press, 2013, p.126.
  6. ^ John Brannigan, 'Twentieth and Twenty-first Century Literature, 1939-2015', in Paul Poplawski (ed.) English Literature in Context, Cambridge University Press, 2017, p.582.
  7. ^ static1.1.sqspcdn.com/static/f/436447/12796874
  8. ^ epc.buffalo.edu/library/Veer-56-1014.pdf
  9. ^ http://intercapillaryspace[permanent dead link]. blogspot.co.uk
  10. ^ http://otherroom.org/tag/roberthampson[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ instituteofelectroniccrinolines.org
  12. ^ http://longpoemmagazine.org.uk
  13. ^ mercurius.one/home/robert-hampson
  14. ^ mollybloom23.weebly.com/robert-hampson.html
  15. ^ glasfrynproject.org.uk
  16. ^ "Recent Reading February 2022". 22 February 2022.
  17. ^ Hampson, Robert; Barry, Peter (1993). New British poetries : the scope of the possible. Manchester [England]: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-3485-X. OCLC 27726596.
  18. ^ Hampson, Robert; Montgomery, Will (2010). Frank O'Hara now : new essays on the New York poet. Liverpool. ISBN 978-1-84631-606-7. OCLC 875227758.
  19. ^ Hampson, Robert; Cheek, Cris (2020). The Allen Fisher companion. Swindon. ISBN 978-1-84861-626-4. OCLC 1150950796.
  20. ^ K. O'Hanlon, 'Modern Literature: British Poetry Post-1950', YWES, 97.1 (2018), 995-1010.
  21. ^ Toms, David (2021). "Book Reviews Robert Kiely reviewed by David Toms, the Allen Fisher Companion reviewed by Lyndon Davies". Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry. 13. doi:10.16995/bip.3030. S2CID 242867358.
  22. ^ "Robert Hampson, FEA, FRSA". Royal Holloway, University of London.
  23. ^ "Professor Robert Hampson - Research - Royal Holloway, University of London".
  24. ^ "Elizabeth-Jane Burnett Royal Holloway Profile". Royal Holloway Research Portal.
  25. ^ "Dr Prudence Bussey-Chamberlain - Research - Royal Holloway, University of London".
  26. ^ "Joo Yeon Park | DAC Artists Info | Exhibitions".
  27. ^ qmul.ac.uk/sed/staff/ramayya.html
  28. ^ "Miss Karen Sandhu - Research - Royal Holloway, University of London".
  29. ^ "HOW2".
  30. ^ "#C4CC Launch 21.6.10 - Professors Robert Hampson and Ahuvia Kahane, Royal Holloway".
  31. ^ "POLYply".
  32. ^ http://www.poetrybeyond[permanent dead link] text.org/hampson-namari
  33. ^ http://otherroom.org/tag/roberthampson[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ https://institute 5 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine of electric crinolines.org
  35. ^ josephconrad.org/News/news.html
  36. ^ Hampson, Robert. http://www.rhul.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/robert-hampson. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  37. ^ "Joseph Conrad Society (UK)".
  38. ^ "- YouTube". YouTube.
  39. ^ http://pure.royalholloway.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/robert-hampson[permanent dead link]
  40. ^ Write of Way, The Women's Press, 1988, p.164.
  41. ^ Flaming Spirit, Virago, 1994, p.201.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 November 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2015.

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This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robert Gavin Hampson FEA FRSA born 1948 is a British poet and academic Hampson was born and raised in Liverpool studied in London and Toronto and settled in London He is currently Research Fellow at the Institute for English Studies University of London and Emeritus Professor at Royal Holloway He was also Visiting Professor at the University of Northumbria 2018 21 He is a member of the Poetics Research Centre and the Centre for GeoHumanities at Royal Holloway He is well known for his contributions to contemporary innovative poetry and the international study of Joseph Conrad Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Poetry 3 Scholarship 3 1 Poetry criticism and creative writing 3 2 Joseph Conrad Scholarship 3 3 Academic service 4 Personal life 5 Fictionalised appearances 6 Publications 7 ReferencesEarly life and education EditRobert Gavin Hampson was born in Liverpool in 1948 He studied English literature at King s College London between 1967 and 1970 and was awarded a Commonwealth Scholarship to complete a master s degree at University of Toronto 1 He then returned to King s College London in 1971 where he completed a PhD on Joseph Conrad Poetry EditDuring the 1970s he co edited the poetry magazine Alembic with Peter Barry poet and Ken Edwards and was a key figure in the second generation of the British Poetry Revival 2 His poetry was published in Cid Corman s Origin Alan Davies s 100 Posters and in a range of other magazines during the 1970s It was also included in the Arts Council s anthology New Poetry 3 1977 His work as one of the editors of Alembic has received attention in two books by Wolfgang Gortschacher Little Magazine Profiles The Little Magazines in Great Britain 1939 1993 University of Salzburg 1993 and Contemporary Views on the Little Magazine Scene Poetry Salzburg 2000 and more recently in an interview with Ken Edwards by Sophie Seita in the magazine mimeo mimeo 2014 This has now been republished as transatlantic axis of alembic in Jacket2 3 His best known work is probably his early long poem Seaport Pushtika 1995 Shearsman 2008 which has been written about by Peter Barry Andrew Duncan Amy Cutler Neal Alexander and others Barry s extended analysis of Seaport begins by noting its extensive use of incorporated data of various kinds ranging from various literary sources including works by Defoe Melville Hawthorne and Conrad to historical accounts of the growth and development of the port of the history of race relations in the city newspaper accounts of local events and local guidebooks Contemporary British Poetry and the City p 159 He concludes by describing this long poem as a large scale vehicle of surprising flexibility which can accommodate the overtly political the archival historical and radically pared down versions of poetry s more familiar affective modes Contemporary British Poetry and the City p 162 Andrew Duncan similarly suggested that Seaport was a major work where the recovery of pure facts without explanatory annotation allows the build up of a new understanding on the large scale The Council of Heresy p 29 Cutler argues that in this work Hampson shows the conflict between the different social typologies of space in the seaport 4 Neal Alexander draws attention to the poem s demonstration of how multiple channels of traffic have shaped the port of Liverpool over time the cotton trade the slave trade Irish emigration 5 In the post 1939 section of the CUP English Literature in Context John Brannigan describes Seaport as an important book for its extraordinary poetic account of the history and development of Liverpool 6 More recently Phillip Jones has included discussion of Seaport in his 2018 Nottingham University PhD Rewriting the Atlantic archipelago Modern British poetry at the coast Hampson s poetry has gone through various stages The early work explored open field poetics and what Peter Barry has called content specific poetics in Seaport but also treated text in How Nell Scored 1976 and on the trail 1976 He subsequently explored self conscious narrative and montage in his Godard inspired film poems one plus one 1980 and handy narratives 1985 and a phrasal poetics derived from Lyotard s The Differend and his own critical engagement with the work of Adrian Clarke in a human measure 1989 and unicorns 7 studies in velocity 1989 and subsequent volumes This part of his career is represented in Assembled Fugitives 2001 some of the critical engagement with Clarke is evidenced in his essay Producing the Unknown in New British poetries 1994 and Clarke in turn has discussed a human measure and unicorns in Robert Hampson and a Neo Formalist Moment his contribution to For Robert 2017 edited by Redell Olsen More recent work by Hampson has been engaged in exploring the resources of the sonnet His poetry has been translated into German Italian and Rumanian See for example Wolfgang Gortschacher amp Ludwig Laher So Also Ist Das Eine Zweisprachige Anthologie Britischer Gegenswartslyrik Haymon Verlag 2002 and the translation of the sequence Lou Mistrau in the Italian journal Soglie August 2014 In 2012 his collection Reworked Disasters knivesforksandspoons press was long listed for the Forward Prize In his comprehensive study of the sonnet in English The Sonnet Oxford University Press 2019 Stephen Regan discusses Reworked Disasters in relation to sonnets by Ken Edwards and Tony Lopez as examples of the contemporary avant garde sonnet He describes Hampson s serious political focus on global warfare imperialism and torture in this linguistically discontinuous fourteen sonnet sequence The Sonnet p 382 Hampson s more recent work includes love s damage which was published in the Surrey Poetry Festival Magazine 21 05 11 edited by Amy De Ath and Jonty Tiplady 7 sonnets 4 sophie first published in Veer Vier September 2013 8 while an explanation of colours was reviewed by Edmund Hardy and Melissa Flores Borquez in Intercapillary Space 9 and out of sight crater 2012 and Liverpool hugs amp kisses his 2014 collaboration with Robert Sheppard are reviewed on the other room website 10 In their review of out of sight the Institute of Electronic Crinolines referred to The artificial highs of Robert Hampson s noir on overload and described the text as evoking a knowingly flimsy fantasy of what resistance to all forms of identification might be like 11 More recently he has contributed to Robert Sheppard s European Union of Imaginary Author s project through a collaboration with Sheppard This collaboration is included in Robert Sheppard ed Twitters for a Lark Poetry of the European Union of Imaginary Authors Shearsman 2017 His sequence Volupte 22 Constructions for Ewald Matare is included in the Spring 2021 issue of Long Poem Magazine 12 and the volume Covodes 1 19 was published in December 2021 by Artery editions 13 Some of the Covodes have been published in Molly Bloom 14 and junction box 15 and a recording of a performance of some of the Covodes with accompaniment by cellist Jo Levi at the 2021 Surrey Poetry Festival is available at vimeo com 556947245 A full recording of Covodes 1 19 and Levy s Suite for Solo Cello is available at www arteryeditions bandcamp com In a review of recent poetry Billy Mills poet has commented on Covodes Hampson folds his multiple concerns into a single nexus with the multiple challenges that confront this ambition for equity that should underpin our society Against which we see the prevailing influence of money and power 16 A selection from Covodes 1 19 translated into Italian by Marzia Dati was published in Soglie XXII 1 2 April August 2020 and an interview with Robert Hampson about Covodes 1 19 by Belinda Gianessi was published in the Tears in the Fence blog http tearsinthefence com blog Scholarship EditPoetry criticism and creative writing Edit Hampson taught at Royal Holloway University of London from 1973 and was Professor of Modern Literature there from 2000 From 2016 to 2019 he was Distinguished Teaching and Research Fellow in the Department of English at Royal Holloway He is currently Research Fellow at the Institute for English Studies University of London and Emeritus Professor at Royal Holloway He was also Visiting Professor at the University of Northumbria 2018 21 He has contributed to the critical discourse about recent and contemporary poetry most visibly through a series of co edited books The New British poetries The scope of the possible Manchester University Press 1993 co edited with Peter Barry which was described as a pioneering work in the field 17 Frank O Hara Now New Essays on the New York Poet Liverpool University Press 2010 co edited with Will Montgomery 18 Clasp Late modernist poetry in London in the 1970s Shearsman 2016 co edited with Ken Edwards and The Allen Fisher Companion Shearsman 2020 co edited with Cris Cheek 19 In their essay for The Year s Work in English Studies K O Hanlon describes Clasp as essential reading for anyone interested in getting to grips with post war poetry and the avant garde 20 Lyndon Davies begins his lengthy review of The Allen Fisher Companion in the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetics 13 1 with the observation Most of whatever it is you might look for in a companion to the work of a poet artist as multifariously challenging as Allen Fisher this book supplies in spades 21 During his time as head of the Department of English Hampson founded the MA in poetic practice at Royal Holloway University of London with Redell Olsen in 2002 and the MA in creative writing with Andrew Motion in 2003 22 With Helen Carr and others he was instrumental in bringing about the regulation change which enabled the introduction of creative writing into the University of London PhD He has regularly taught on the poetic practice pathway and he was director of the MA in creative writing for 2016 17 Graduates of the creative writing programme whom he taught include the novelists Tahmima Anam Adam O Riordan Anna Whitwham and Sarah Perry and the poets Robert Selby and Declan Ryan 23 Graduates of the poetic practice programme whom he taught include Elizabeth Jane Burnett 24 Prudence Chamberlain 25 Becky Cremin citation needed Frances Kruk citation needed Ryan Ormonde citation needed Jooyeon Park 26 Nisha Ramayya 27 Sophie Robinson citation needed Karenjit Sandhu 28 and Steven Willey citation needed He has also made a significant contribution to innovative poetry in London as the organiser of events and conferences and as the convenor and curator of two important seminar series In the 1970s he organised a short reading series Future Events at The White Swan in Covent Garden with Ken Edwards and Mike Dobbie At the end of the 1970s he and Erik Vonna Michel organised three one day Saturday Courses at Lower Green Farm Bob Cobbing Allen Fisher and Eric Mottram were the subjects of the different days See Ken Edwards s account of Lower Green Farm in Clasp and in his memoir Wild Metrics In the 1980s he organised two conferences on Contemporary innovative Poetry at the Centre for English Studies in the University of London Senate House and in the 1990s he facilitated the six SVP Colloquia that took place there organised by Lawrence Upton In 1999 he was asked to take over the TALKS series that Bob Perelman had established at King s College London during Pereleman s year as a visiting professor there Hilda Bronstein has given an account of the early years of the London TALKS series in How2 29 The TALKS series continued for some years at King s under Hampson s direction and then moved to Birkbeck College University of London where Redell Olsen and Frances Presley were co organisers with him It was superseded by the Contemporary Innovative Poetry Research Seminar which he runs with Amy Evans Bauer at the University of London Institute for English Studies In 2004 he set up the Runnymede International Literary Festival in collaboration with Royal Holloway and Runnymede Borough Council He has continued to be the Festival Director More recently the Festival transferred some of it activities to Central London as Runnymede in London through collaboration with the Centre for Creative Collaboration c4cc 30 which also provided the venue for Polyply the event series run by Redell Olsen Will Montgomery and Kristen Kreider 31 In 2010 11 he collaborated with the Palestinian visual artist Leena Nammari on a concertina book The Long View as part of the Beyond Text project 32 During 2014 he curated an event series Amid the Ruins with Carrie Foulkes at the Daniel Blau Gallery Hoxton Square London 33 In 2017 on the occasion of his retirement from full time teaching Redell Olsen edited For Robert An Anthology RHUL Poetics Research Centre The Institute of the Electric Crinolines 34 Joseph Conrad Scholarship Edit He has also pursued a parallel career as a Conrad scholar and editor with three monographs on Joseph Conrad Joseph Conrad Betrayal and Identity 1992 Cross Cultural Encounters in Joseph Conrad s Malay Fiction 2000 and Conrad s Secrets 2013 Conrad s Secrets received the first place prize for the Adam Gillon Award 2015 from the Joseph Conrad Society of America for the best recent work on Joseph Conrad In 2017 he received the Ian P Watt Award from the Joseph Conrad Society of America for excellence in Conrad studies Previous recipients of this life long achievement award include Norman Sherry and J Hillis Miller 35 He has subsequently been awarded the third place prize for the Adam Gillon Award 2018 for the collection of essays Conrad and Language Edinburgh U P 2016 which he co edited with Katherine Isobel Baxter In 2020 he published a critical biography Joseph Conrad in the Critical Lives series from Reaktion Books Maya Jasanoff describes it as insightful judicious and elegant Joseph Conrad marvellously distils a lifetime of learning by one of the world s leading Conrad scholars This is the best short guide to Conrad s life available His most recent publication is The Reception of Joseph Conrad in Europe Bloomsbury 2022 co edited with Veronique Pauly He was editor of The Conradian 1989 96 and co edited Conrad and Theory with Andrew William Gibson Rodopi 1998 He also edited various Conrad texts Lord Jim 1986 Victory 1989 Heart of Darkness 1995 for Penguin books as well as Rudyard Kipling s Something of Myself 1987 and Soldiers Three In Black amp White 1993 and Rider Haggard s King Solomon s Mines 2000 36 His edition of Heart of Darkness for Penguin included the first accurate transcription of Conrad s Congo Diary and was the first to use the Carte des routes de portage 1894 which was supplied to Belgian State Officials for the journey up river from Matadi to annotate Conrad s account of the same journey which he undertook four years earlier He also edited Nostromo and co edited with Andrew Purssell Ford Madox Ford s Parade s End and Conrad s Lingard Trilogy for Wordsworth A short lecture by him on Heart of Darkness is available on https www massolit io lecturers 119 A longer lecture is available on YouTube https www youtube com watch v Ni4qpFdyG4 The lecture he gave on Joseph Conrad Today for the launch of the Joseph Conrad Fellowship in Warsaw in December 2021 is available on YouTube youtube com watch v NeE6Ugg7fEU And the lecture he gave to PUNO The Polish University Abroad on Conrad Colonialism and Africa in March 2022 is also available on YouTube https www youtube com watch v CMqUe1YtoYw A lecture he gave in March 2022 for St Mary s University on Joseph Conrad in the Modern World Conrad and Africa discussing Heart of Darkness and An Outpost of Progress is also available on YouTube https www youtube com watch v FrUiOo2dPds He co edited with Helen Chambers Guy de Maupassant s Mademoiselle Perle and other stories riverrun 2020 a selection from the translations made by Elsie Martindale and Ada Galsworthy which were first published in 1903 and 1904 respectively Conrad was in touch with both Elsie Martindale and Ada Galsworthy about their translations Hampson was elected Chair of the Joseph Conrad Society UK in 2015 37 He was an adviser for Hanyut film a film by the prize winning Malaysian director U Wei Haji Saari based on Conrad s first novel Almayer s Folly 38 He also appears in the 2018 TCM documentary El sueno imposible de David Lean an exploration of David Lean s long held plan to adapt Conrad s masterpiece Nostromo as a film lt https youtube com watch v O2eDIM5XnOU permanent dead link gt and in Sladami Conrada In the footsteps of Conrad on Polish television In 2019 the Polish television series Chuligan Literacki Literary Hooligan devoted two successive programmes to his work on Joseph Conrad This series on TVP Kultura presented fifteen programmes on the most outstanding English writers philosophers and historians and included programmes on Quentin Skinner Antony Beevor and others The programmes are available on vod tvp pl video chuligan literacki roberthampson cz 1 40566562 Academic service Edit In addition he has undertaken various forms of service to the academic community He was a panel member for the RAE 2008 and the REF 2014 He was also a panel member for the Rumanian and Hong Kong RAEs He was a member of the QAA Benchmarking Group for Creative Writing and is currently a member of the Practice Research Advisory Group 39 the European Science Foundation Panel of Experts and the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission Advisory Committee Personal life EditHis first wife was the Bengali children s writer Sibani Raychaudhuri In Kolkotta her early work was published in the children s magazine Shondesh edited by Satyajit Ray In London she was on the Committee of the South Asian Literary Society founded by Ranjana Ash and a member of the Asia Women Writers Collective 40 She published translations of Bengali poetry produced jointly with Hampson in the London Magazine and the TLS short stories in Spare Rib and poems and stories in the two anthologies produced by the Collective Write of Way The Women s Press 1988 and Flaming Spirit Virago 1994 41 Hampson later married the George Eliot critic Gerlinde Roder Bolton Fictionalised appearances EditHe appears as a Conrad specialist in London by the name of X in Jenny Diski s Skating to Antarctica 1997 and he and his colleague Andrew Gibson Andrew William Gibson also make an appearance lightly disguised in Adam Roberts s 2003 science fiction novel Polystom 42 Publications EditPoetry Degrees of Addiction London Share 1975 How Nell Scored London Poet amp Peasant 1976 A Necessary Displacement Orpington Pushtika 1978 A Feast of Friends Durham Pig Press 1982 A City at War London Northern Lights 1985 with David Miller Nevsky Prospekt Dublin hardPressed poetry 1988 A human measure Dublin hardPressed poetry 1989 Unicorns 7 Studies in Velocity London Pushtika 1989 with Gerlinde Roder Bolton Dingo London Pushtika Press 1994 Seaport interim edition Woking Pushtika Press 1995 with Gerlinde Roder Bolton higher densities a new hampshire sampler Woking Pushtika Press 1996 C for Security Woking Pushtika Press 2001 Pentimento Pushtika Press 2005 out of sight Crater Press 2012 Assembled fugitives selected poems 1973 1998 Exeter Stride Press 2001 Seaport Shearsman 2008 an explanation of colours Veer Books 2010 with Leena Nammari The Long View 2011 Reworked Disasters kfs 2012 with Robert Sheppard Liverpool Hugs amp Kisses ship of fools pushtika 2015 Critical WorkMonographs Joseph Conrad Betrayal and Identity Macmillan 1992 Cross Cultural Encounters in Joseph Conrad s Malay Fiction Palgrave 2000 Conrad s Secrets Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Joseph Conrad Reaktion Books 2020 Co edited Volumes Co edited with Peter Barry New British poetries The scope of the possible Manchester university Press 1993 Co edited with Tony Davenport Ford Madox Ford A Re Appraisal Rodopi 2002 Co edited with Max Saunders Ford Madox Ford s Modernity Rodopi 2003 Co edited with Will Montgomery Frank O Hara Now Liverpool University Press 2010 Co edited with Ken Edwards Clasp late modernist poetry in London in the 1970s Shearsman 2016 Co edited with Katherine Isobel Baxter Conrad and Language Edinburgh University Press 2016 Co edited with cris cheek The Allen Fisher Companion Shearsman 2020 Co edited with Veronique Pauly The European Reception of Joseph Conrad Bloomsbury 2022 Editions Joseph Conrad Lord Jim edited by Cedric Watts textual editing by Hampson Penguin Books 1986 Rudyard Kipling Something of Myself with an Introduction by Richard Holmes Penguin Books 1987 Joseph Conrad Victory Penguin Books 1989 Rudyard Kipling Soldiers Three In Black and White with an Introduction by Salman Rushdie Penguin Books 1993 Joseph Conrad Heart of Darkness with The Congo Diary Penguin Books 1995 Joseph Conrad Nostromo with an Introduction and Notes by Hampson Wordsworth Classics 2000 Rider Haggard King Solomon s Mines with a Preface by Giles Foden Penguin Books 2007 Joseph Conrad Heart of Darkness edited by Owen Knowles with The Congo Diary edited by Hampson Penguin Books 2007 Joseph Conrad amp Ford Madox Ford The Nature of a Crime ReScript Books 2012 Ford Madox Ford Parade s End with an Introduction by Robert Hampson and Andrew Purssell Wordsworth Books 2013 Joseph Conrad Victory with a Preface by John Gray and 1989 Introduction by Hampson Penguin Books 2015 Joseph Conrad The Lingard Trilogy Introduction by Andrew Purssell Notes by Hampson Wordsworth Classics 2016 Joseph Conrad Almayer s Folly Ukrainian translation Introduction by Hampson Tempora 2018 Joseph Conrad The Secret Agent Ukrainian translation Introduction by Hampson Tempora 2018 Guy de Maupassant Mademoiselle Perle and other stories Preface by Helen Chambers and Hampson riverrun 2020 e booksSounds Anglo American Robert Vas Dias interviewed by Robert Hampson http www argotistonline co uk SOUNDS 20ANGLO AMERICAN pdfReferences Edit Hampson Robert http www rhul ac uk portal en persons robert hampson a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help dead link Miller Price David Richard 2006 British Poetry Magazines 1914 2000 The British Library p 127 ISBN 978 0 7123 4941 3 jacket2 org interviews transatlantic axis alembic Amy Cutler Language Disembodied The Coast and Forest in Modern British Poetry Ph D Royal Holloway University of London 2017 p 166 Neal Alexander The Poetry of Ports in Neal Alexander and David Cooper eds Poetry and Geography Space and Place in Postwar Poetry Liverpool University Press 2013 p 126 John Brannigan Twentieth and Twenty first Century Literature 1939 2015 in Paul Poplawski ed English Literature in Context Cambridge University Press 2017 p 582 static1 1 sqspcdn com static f 436447 12796874 epc buffalo edu library Veer 56 1014 pdf http intercapillaryspace permanent dead link blogspot co uk http otherroom org tag roberthampson permanent dead link instituteofelectroniccrinolines org http longpoemmagazine org uk mercurius one home robert hampson mollybloom23 weebly com robert hampson html glasfrynproject org uk Recent Reading February 2022 22 February 2022 Hampson Robert Barry Peter 1993 New British poetries the scope of the possible Manchester England Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 3485 X OCLC 27726596 Hampson Robert Montgomery Will 2010 Frank O Hara now new essays on the New York poet Liverpool ISBN 978 1 84631 606 7 OCLC 875227758 Hampson Robert Cheek Cris 2020 The Allen Fisher companion Swindon ISBN 978 1 84861 626 4 OCLC 1150950796 K O Hanlon Modern Literature British Poetry Post 1950 YWES 97 1 2018 995 1010 Toms David 2021 Book Reviews Robert Kiely reviewed by David Toms the Allen Fisher Companion reviewed by Lyndon Davies Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry 13 doi 10 16995 bip 3030 S2CID 242867358 Robert Hampson FEA FRSA Royal Holloway University of London Professor Robert Hampson Research Royal Holloway University of London Elizabeth Jane Burnett Royal Holloway Profile Royal Holloway Research Portal Dr Prudence Bussey Chamberlain Research Royal Holloway University of London Joo Yeon Park DAC Artists Info Exhibitions qmul ac uk sed staff ramayya html Miss Karen Sandhu Research Royal Holloway University of London HOW2 C4CC Launch 21 6 10 Professors Robert Hampson and Ahuvia Kahane Royal Holloway POLYply http www poetrybeyond permanent dead link text org hampson namari http otherroom org tag roberthampson permanent dead link https institute Archived 5 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine of electric crinolines org josephconrad org News news html Hampson Robert http www rhul ac uk portal en persons robert hampson a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help dead link Joseph Conrad Society UK YouTube YouTube http pure royalholloway ac uk portal en persons robert hampson permanent dead link Write of Way The Women s Press 1988 p 164 Flaming Spirit Virago 1994 p 201 Polystom www AdamRoberts com Archived from the original on 17 November 2014 Retrieved 30 June 2015 Robert Hampson http www rhul ac uk https pure royalholloway ac uk portal en persons robert hampson 00ffc3a4 d4c7 4454 aec2 670ef0e5300e html Eric Mottram The British Poetry Revival 1960 1975 in Robert Hampson and Peter Barry New British Poetries The scope of the possible Manchester University Press 1993 The hard lyric re registering Liverpool poetry in Peter Barry Contemporary British Poetry and the City Manchester University Press 2000 137 64 Viannu Lidia Interview with Robert Hampson Wolfgang Gortschacher Little Magazine Profiles University of Salzburg 1993 pp 163 65 Wolfgang Gortschacher Contemporary Views on the Little Magazine Scene Poetry Salzburg 2000 pp 388 424 Richard Price and David Miller British Little Magazines British Library Publications 2006 Neal Alexander David Cooper eds Poetry amp Geography Space amp Place in post War Poetry Oxford University Press http www archiveofthenow org ArchiveoftheNow http writing upenn edu pennsound http jacketmagazine com Hampson Robert Seaport PDF Shearsman love s damage Surrey Poetry Festival Magazine 2011 lt lt http static1 1 sqspcdn com static f 436447 12796874 permanent dead link gt gt sonnets 4 sophie in Veer Vier lt lt epc buffalo edu library Veer 56 1014 pdf gt gt Edmund Hardy and Melissa Flores Borquez Intellectual Labour lt lt http intercapillaryspace blogspot co uk gt gt also at lt lt http 1blog oqueasmeninaspensam com permanent dead link gt gt Hampson Archive http otherroom org tag roberthampson permanent dead link https polyply wordpress com For Robert an anthology https indd adobe com embed f4f65fa1 970f 467f 8cd0 48405e21d73b startpage 1 amp allowFullscree true Stephen Regan The Sonnet Oxford University Press 2019 Andrew Duncan The Council of Heresy A primer of poetry in a balkanised terrain Shearsman Books 2009 Ken Edwards Wild Metrics Grand Iota 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Gavin Hampson amp oldid 1147896560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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