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The HRC Seymour Lecture in Biography is presented
in association with Australian Book Review, which will publish the
Lecture in full later this year.
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Supported by the National Library of Australia |
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Richard Holmes will talk about the importance of the great tradition
of popular biography both in Britain and Australia, and the growing
influence of “life writing” as it has currently developed.
Drawing on his own experience as a working biographer over forty years,
he will also discuss the value of teaching biography in universities,
and the possible direction of biographical writing in the future.

Richard Holmes is a Fellow of the British Academy,
and was Professor of Biographical Studies at the University of East
Anglia (2001-7). He is editor of the Harper Perennial series Classic
Biographies launched in 2004. He holds honorary doctorates from UEA,
University of Kingston, University of East London and the Tavistock
Institute, and was awarded an OBE in 1992.
His first book, Shelley: The Pursuit, won the Somerset Maugham
Prize in 1974. Coleridge: Early Visions won the 1989 Whitbread
Book of the Year, and Dr Johnson & Mr Savage won the James
Tait Black Prize. Coleridge: Darker Reflections, won the Duff
Cooper Prize and the Heinemann Award. He has published two studies of
European biography, Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer in 1985, and Sidetracks: Explorations of a Romantic Biographer in 2000; together with a number of more academic essays on the discipline
of biography.
His recent monograph on biography and portraiture for the National
Portrait Gallery, Insights: The Romantic Poets and their Circle (2005), was unusual in that it included scientists alongside literary
writers. He has also written many drama-documentaries for BBC Radio,
most recently The Frankenstein Experiment (2002), and A
Cloud in a Paper Bag (2007) about 18th century balloon mania.
He is has just completed The Age of Wonder, a large and controversial
biographical study of scientists in the Romantic Period, which will
be published in September 2008 by HarperCollins Australia and UK, and
Pantheon USA. Described as “a relay-race of scientific stories”,
it makes a radical re-interpretation of the impact of scientific discovery
on Romanticism, and includes astronomers, chemists, balloonists, explorers
and “a surprising number of not-so-crazy poets”. He gave
his most recent papers at the BAAS Science Festival Norwich (The Origin
of Scientists), at the British Academy London (Scientific Discovery
and the Poets), at the University of Verona, and the Ludwig-Maximilians-University
Munich (What is Happening in British Biography), and at the National
Portrait Gallery, London.