Dr Laura Blunsden BA (Hons), MA, PhD

Dr Laura Blunsden

Department of English Literature
Teaching Fellow

Contact details

Address
Department of English
Arts 143
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

I joined the University of Birmingham in September 2024, having studied and taught at the University of Liverpool.

Qualifications

  • PhD, University of Liverpool, 2024
  • MRes, University of Liverpool, 2020
  • BA Hons, University of Liverpool, 2019
  • FLTHE Associate Fellowship, University of Liverpool, 2022

Biography

I joined the University of Birmingham in 2024, after studying for my PhD, Master’s, and undergraduate degrees at the University of Liverpool. At Liverpool, I taught on a range of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature modules. My research informs my teaching, and my teaching informs my research: my primary interest lies in pedagogical relationships between writers. My work focuses on literary communities, creative influence, the history of emotion, and makes use of psychoanalytic approaches to art.

Teaching

I teach on a range of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature modules. I lecture on the first year Poetry, Prose, and Women’s Writing modules; on the second year Jane Austen module; and on the third year Hidden Romanticism module. I am also the convenor of the second year Eighteenth-Century and Romantic Literature module.

I would be pleased to supervise undergraduate dissertations on aspects of eighteenth-century society and culture, or on the works of authors writing in this period.

Research

I am currently developing my PhD thesis, ‘Mentoring Relationships in the Lives and Literature of Eighteenth-Century Prose Writers’, for publication as a monograph, Mentoring the Mind. In it, I argue that the concept of ‘mentorship’, which was first developed in the eighteenth century, is founded on voluntary, reciprocal engagement that nurtures mutual respect, esteem, and affection in a pedagogical context. Beyond mere knowledge transfer, I suggest, mentorship is critical for fostering personal and social development, emotional growth, and mutual enrichment. The first chapter of my thesis is published as an article, ‘The Eighteenth-Century Mentor Book’, in the Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies: <https://doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12937>.

My research makes use of psychoanalytical and psychotherapeutic frameworks in its approach to literature. I am always interested in new developments within these traditions, and to this end, I also reviewed Allan V. Horwitz’s Personality Disorders: A Short History of Narcissistic, Borderline, Antisocial, and Other Types for The British Society for Literature and Science.