Phyllis Weliver Explained

Birth Date:28 September 1968
Nationality:American
Occupation:Academic

Phyllis Weliver (born September 28, 1968) is an American academic specializing in Victorian literature and music history.

Career

Weliver completed first degrees at Oberlin College, Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and the University of Cambridge, and her doctoral studies at the University of Sussex.[1] She taught at Wilkes University, and is now Professor of English at Saint Louis University.

In 2011, Weliver became a lifetime Fellow of Gladstone's Library in Wales. She was a visiting scholar at St Catharine's College, Cambridge for the 2013–14 academic year.[2] She received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship in 2015,[3] and a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend in 2004.[4]

Her publications focus on the nineteenth-century novel, Victorian poetry, and music in nineteenth-century Britain. In 2016, she began Sounding Tennyson, the first test case for adding sound to the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). She has also contributed to BBC Two Television[5] and to BBC Radio 3.[6]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Who's Who in Humanities: Phyllis Weliver. humanities.academickeys.com. en. 2018-05-04.
  2. News: News of Members. 2015. The St Catharine's Magazine.
  3. Web site: Fellowships 2014. neh.gov.
  4. Facts page, NEH Summer Stipends, June 2005.
  5. Weliver, Phyllis (May 2009). Interviewee, The Birth of British Music: Mendelssohn – The Prophet, BBC Two Television Series. Presented by Charles Hazlewood. Produced by Francesca Kemp.
  6. Weliver. Phyllis. March 2015. Unsung Heroines of Classical Music: Mary Gladstone. The Essay, BBC Radio 3.