About our research
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This research network offers academics a dynamic space to revisit the rich, complex legacies of nineteenth-century literature, culture and art, using them as a lens to understand the world we live in today — and to imagine the world we want to build for tomorrow. Rooted in Manchester, once nicknamed Cottonopolis for its pivotal role in the Industrial Revolution, the network explores how the city’s industrial past shaped not only local but global histories.
It does not shy away from the contradictions of this legacy. Manchester’s nineteenth-century prosperity was built on industries that exploited workers and the environment, yet the city also became a crucible for radical ideas and transformative social movements. From the tragic events of Peterloo to the fight for women’s suffrage, Manchester’s streets have been the stage for powerful struggles for justice and equality.
Bringing together scholars interested in figures like Elizabeth Gaskell, Friedrich Engels, the Pankhursts, and LS Lowry — as well as influential visitors such as Frederick Douglass and Olaudah Equiano — the network invites critical conversations about art, literature, politics and social change. It also foregrounds the city’s early waves of migration and the diverse communities that laid the foundations for Manchester’s vibrant multicultural identity today.
For academics, this network is more than a space for historical inquiry: it is a place to connect the past to the present, to examine enduring questions of power, identity and belonging, and to show how nineteenth-century culture still resonates in Manchester and beyond.

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Tuesday 17th Oct | 13:00 | Activity name would go here | MMU | A summary of the activity would go here |
Tuesday 17th Oct | 15:00 | The activity name would go here | MMU | A summary of the activity would go here |
Wednesday 18th Oct | 9:00 | The activity name would go here | MMU | A summary of the activity would go here |
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