Areas of expertise: early modern literature, religion, politics; letter writing and epistolary culture; manuscript culture and archives; book history; literature and ethics; medical humanities.
Phone: 02 9465 9591
Email: Johanna.Harris@acu.edu.au
Location: ACU North Sydney Campus
Johanna’s research focuses on the literature, religion, and politics of the early modern period, with particular interest in non-fictional prose, especially letters, and in devotional writing. Her publications have focused on well-known writers such as Andrew Marvell, Richard Baxter, and Thomas Traherne, and lesser-known writers such as Brilliana Harley and Lucy Robartes. She is currently working on two major editing projects for Oxford University Press: as co-general editor (with Dr Alison Searle) of the complete correspondence of the prolific puritan writer Richard Baxter (1615-1691), and volume editor (Vol. 1); and as volume editor of the meditational prose and poetry of Thomas Traherne for The Oxford Traherne (Vol. 3). Both projects involve extensive work with manuscripts and early modern printed books. She is completing a monograph on puritan epistolary writing, Godly Letters.
Johanna is also interested in the ethical value of literature, particularly human dignity, bibliotherapy and the medical humanities, and the role of literature in enhancing intergenerational cohesion.
‘Thomas Traherne’s The Ceremonial Law’, Folger Research Fellowship, Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington D.C. (non-residential due to Covid-19 travel restrictions), July—August 2021 ($US3500).
UPP Foundation grant to support research into reading and intergenerational relationships, and to support a new ‘co-living’ pilot scheme in Exeter (£21,500).
Headley Trust (Sainsbury Foundation) award for research on reading, intergenerational relationships, and dignity in ageing (£12,000), 2017–18.
University of Exeter Annual Fund Award for one-day conference, ‘Reading for Life’, April 28, 2017 and further funding for a conference in November 2019.
‘Reassembling the letters of the English churches abroad: the United Provinces, 1600–1640’, EU-COST Action IS1310 Short Term Scientific Mission research grant (€2000), 2016.
‘Reading for Happiness’ network, University of Exeter Humanities and Social Sciences Strategic Development Fund (£2000), seed grant, 2014–15.
Folger Research Fellowship, Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington D.C. ($US7500), 2013.
James M. Osborn Research Fellowship, Beinecke Library, Yale University ($US2500), 2013.
Advisory Board Member, AHRC-funded project, ‘The Letters of ‘Bess of Hardwick’ (c.1527–1608)’, led by Dr Alison Wiggins (Glasgow), 2008–11.
Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, 2014.
Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice, University of Exeter, 2014.
Invited Affiliate, COST Action IS1310, ‘Reassembling the Republic of Letters 1500-1800’, 2016.
General editor (with Dr Alison Searle, Leeds), The Correspondence of Richard Baxter: a 9-volume edition (Oxford: Oxford University Press), scheduled for staggered publication, 2025—29. I am volume editor, Vol.1 (1638-53). Editorial team includes Nigel Smith (Princeton), Andrea Walkden (Toronto), Jason McElligott (Trinity College, Dublin), Tim Cooper (Otago).
Volume editor, The Oxford Traherne, Volume 3: The Osborn Manuscript (Select Meditations) and ‘The Ceremonial Law’ (Oxford: Oxford University Press), in progress and forthcoming, 2026. (General editor, Dr Julia Smith)
Exeter Intergenerational Project, 2018–19 (UPP Foundation, University of Exeter.
Exeter Care Homes Reading Project, 2011–2022. (http://readingproject.exeter.ac.uk)
Panellist, ‘Only the Lonely: Is Loneliness a Growing Health Epidemic?’ TRT World Roundtable, presented by David Foster, 9 August, 2018.
Invited Chair, Public Policy Exchange, ‘Raising the Standards of Care Homes: Tackling.
Vulnerability and Addressing Priorities for Reform’, 7 June, 2018.
Johanna Harris, ‘Here’s why some Dutch university students are living in nursing homes’, The Conversation, published 29 November, 2016.
Historical Contributor, BBC4/KeoNorth Films documentary, ‘The Century That Wrote Itself’, presented by Adam Nicolson. Screened April 2013. Contributed research and interviewed on subject of Winthrop family letters.
‘Why Does Reading Matter?’ (with Professor Helen Taylor), Fowey Festival of Words and Music, 11 May, 2013.
‘Lucy Robartes and the Library at the National Trust’s Lanhydrock’, Du Maurier Festival, May 2012.