Inaugural Lecture: Tim Milnes

In brief

Date - 24 April 2024

Venue - Lecture Theatre G.03, 50 George Square

Speaker - Tim Milnes (Personal Chair of Romantic Literature and Philosophy)

Title Ex Nihilo: Romanticism, Creativity, and the Invention of ‘Literature’

Series - Inaugural Lectures at the University of Edinburgh

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About the lecture

At what point did ‘literature’ (everything written) become ‘Literature’ (a kind of writing with special, even transcendent value)? This lecture traces the origins of this distinction to a fundamental realignment of philosophy and literature during the Romantic period (1790-1830), one which revolutionised the role played by literature in cultural life.

It will examine the ways in which, by rethinking writing in terms of creation from nothing (ex nihilo) rather than merely as a process of invention, writers such as William Wordsworth, Samuel Tayor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats evolved the notion of an absolute literary value upon which modern conceptions of ‘Literature’ and the ‘literary’ would (for better or worse) be based.

About the speaker

Professor Tim Milnes was born in 1970. He holds a first degree in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of St Andrews and a DPhil in English Literature from the University of Oxford. After gaining his DPhil, he was first a Lecturer at Christ Church College, Canterbury before becoming Junior Research Fellow at University College, Oxford. He has been at the University of Edinburgh since 2001, first as Lecturer, then becoming a Senior Lecturer in 2008. He was appointed to the Chair of Romantic Literature and Philosophy in 2022.

His research focuses on the literature and philosophy of the ‘long’ eighteenth century (1688-1832), with special emphasis on the Romantic period (1790-1832). In addition to intellectual history, his work has engaged with contemporary philosophical movements, including neopragmatism, speculative realism, and object-oriented ontology. He is currently working on a book project entitled The Waste of Romanticism.

His career highlights include three monographs: Knowledge and Indifference in English Romantic Prose (Cambridge, 2003); The Truth About Romanticism: Pragmatism and Idealism in Keats, Shelley, Coleridge (Cambridge, 2010) and The Testimony of Sense: Empiricism and the Essay from Hume to Hazlitt (Oxford, 2019) as well as a jointly edited anthology of essays (Romanticism, Sincerity, and Authenticity Palgrave, 2010) and a wide range of book chapters and five peer-reviewed articles on writers including Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth, Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, David Hume, and Jeremy Bentham.

In his so-called “spare time” he indulges in oil painting (which he hopes to turn into second career after retirement), renovating old houses, and aimless countryside wanderings with son Sam.

Read Tim's full staff profile on the University website

How to attend

This lecture is a free, in-person event held on the University of Edinburgh campus. It is open to all.

The event will not be live streamed - tickets (bookable via Eventbrite) are for access to the venue. However, the lecture may be photographed and/or recorded and added to the University website afterwards. If you would prefer not to appear in any recordings, please contact us in advance or speak to us on the day. It's not a problem.

Book your free ticket on Eventbrite

About Inaugural Lectures

Inaugural Lectures are free public talks by recently-appointed Professors and Chairs at the University of Edinburgh where they share their work with a wide audience, inviting reflection and discussion on its broader implications.

Browse more Inaugural Lectures on the University of Edinburgh website

Are you interested in English Literature at Edinburgh?

We offer a wide range of undergraduate programmes, taught masters, and research degrees, including a Masters by Research and a PhD. As an undergraduate, you will read works of literature written in English from around the world, and encounter a range of ideas about the nature and purpose of literary study. Our courses explore the relationship between literary texts and the construction of national, international and imperial cultures. Working with colleagues in LLC and across the wider University, we are able to support postgraduate research which crosses boundaries between languages and disciplines.

Find out more about studying English Literature