Nikki Hessell | |
Thesis1 Title: | Invention and re-invention: the composition of Mary Robinson's Lyrical tales (1800) |
Thesis1 Url: | https://ir.wgtn.ac.nz/handle/123456789/23596 |
Thesis1 Year: | 2000 |
Thesis2 Title: | Coleridge as journalist 1799-1800. |
Thesis2 Url: | https://openlibrary.org/books/OL20950870M/Coleridge_as_journalist_1799-1800. |
Thesis2 Year: | 2003 |
Nicola Anne Hessell is a pakēhā New Zealand academic,[1] and is a full professor at Victoria University of Wellington, specialising in British Romantic literature, and the intersection between Romantic literature and indigeneity.
Hessell completed a master's degree at Victoria University of Wellington in 2000, with a thesis titled Invention and re-invention: the composition of Mary Robinson's Lyrical tales (1800).[2] She followed this with a PhD titled title at the University of Toronto.[3] Hessell then joined the faculty of the Victoria University of Wellington, rising to full professor in 2022, where she is part of the New Zealand India Research Institute.[4] [5]
Hessell's main research interest is in the intersection between Indigeneity and Romanticism, but she is also interested in the relationship between journalism and writing, and the history of British print culture.[6] [7] Hessell has been awarded two Marsden grants, including the 2018 grant "Sensitive Negotiations: Indigenous Diplomacy and British Romantic Poetry".[8] She has published three books, and a edited a collection of journalist Robin Hyde's parliamentary reports.[9]
In 2022 Hessell was awarded a Peterson Fellowship to conduct research on the use of poetry in Indigenous diplomacy using the American Antiquarian Society's collection of Native American writing.[10]
In 2017 Hessell won the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism's Romantic Circles Pedagogy Contest, for her fourth-year course "Romanticism and Indigeneity".
Alongside co-author Stephen Clothier, Hessell won the International Association for the Study of Scottish Literatures' inaugural Jack Medal in 2018. The prize is awarded annually for the best newly published academic article on a subject dealing with Scottish literature and related to reception and/or diaspora, and Hessell and Clothier won for the article To Mary in Aotearoa: Burns’s ‘Thou Ling’ring Star’ and Scottish Identity in New Zealand. The judges commented that "Hessell and Clothier's consideration of Robert Burns's reception in New Zealand opens up important discussions about diaspora, indigeneity, and literary interpretation in Scottish studies".[11]