J. B. Bullen

J. B. Bullen (Barrie Bullen) is a noted interdisciplinary writer specialising in examining the relationship between literature, mostly English literature, and art in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Work

Bullen has written on Coleridge, Ruskin, Dickens, George Eliot, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Thomas Hardy. He is the editor of two notable series for the Peter Lang publishing company: Cultural Interactions: Studies in the Relationship between the Arts and Writing and (with Isobel Armstrong) Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century. Bullen took his first degree at the University of Cambridge. This was followed by spells as a researcher at the University of Oxford and at the University of Reading, where he remains an emeritus professor. He now holds the Chair of English Literature and Culture in the Department of English Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London.[1][2][3]

Private life

Bullen's spouse is the noted writer and painter Roma Tearne. They have three children.[4]

Selected publications

  • 1986: The Expressive Eye: Vision and Perception in the Work of Thomas Hardy, Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • 1995: The Myth of the Renaissance in Nineteenth-Century Writing, Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • 1998: The Pre-Raphaelite Body: Fear and Desire in Painting, Poetry, and Criticism, Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • 2003: Byzantium rediscovered, London: Phaidon.
  • 2011: Rossetti: Painter and Poet, London: Frances Lincoln
  • 2013: Thomas Hardy: the World of his Novels, London: Frances Lincoln
gollark: You should have perms for that now also.
gollark: ++tel init_webhook
gollark: Also notable is that apparently floating point inaccuracies in the neural network make the hashes turn out differently on different devices. Yet the cryptographic system doing the matches is only able to do *exact* matches, not hamming distance or something.
gollark: That wouldn't stop this sort of attack from working.
gollark: There are other possible uses, though. Someone with illegal material could just set the hash to some random value without making the image look particularly weird.

References



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