Resources on British Studies
Here you can find a list of resources for pursuing British Studies in the Northeast region (New England and the Canadian Maritimes) and beyond. Suggestions for resources not listed here are always welcome and can be made at this link.
British Studies Organizations
The North American Conference on British Studies (NACBS), the national umbrella organization of the NECBS, which holds an annual conference in conjunction with one of its regional organizations. The next NACBS Annual Meeting is November 14-17, 2024 in Denver, CO in conjunction with the Western Conference on British Studies. The 2025 meeting will be in conjunction with the NECBS.
The NACBS also hosts semi-monthly Virtual Events which you find out more about here.
The following are the other regional British Studies organizations:
The Mid-Atlantic Conference on British Studies
The Southern Conference on British Studies
The Midwest Conference on British Studies
The Western Conference on British Studies
The Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies
The following are other organizations dedicated to British Studies in North America, some of which sponsor regular conferences or events:
The American Antiquarian Society
The American Historical Association
The Center for Scottish Studies, Guelph University
Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard
The Irish Institute at Boston College
The Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies, University of Notre Dame
The Kinney Center for Renaissance Studies at UMass Amherst
The Medieval Academy of America
The New England Historical Association
The North American Association for the Study of Welsh Culture and History
The Northeast Victorian Studies Association
The USC-Huntington Early Modern Institute British History Seminar
Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions
In addition to this list of institutes and organizations that hold regular events, the NECBS also recommends subscribing to H-Albion, a listserv primarily focused in British Studies. You can subscribe to H-Albion through H-Net.