The Garden Of Englishhome



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TheEnglish Home & The English Garden both enjoyed increased circulation during 2019, as revealed in the ABC Consumer Magazines’ Report.

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TheEnglish Home (group) posted an increased average circulation of 72,745, showing healthy year-on-year growth and demonstrating the title’s significant reach. This is the fifth consecutive year that TheEnglish Home has enjoyed increased circulation, with the UK edition enjoying 2.5% growth. The magazine remains within the top ten Home Interests titles.

Englishhome

Newsstand and subscription sales were both robust in 2019; The English Home boasts the second highest number of subscribers in the Home Interests category and its international circulation is close to double that of its nearest competitor.

What Is An English Garden

Englishhome

This specialist title – which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year – enjoyed a successful 2019 in comparison to a number of its competitors, which experienced significant decreases in average circulation. This fantastic overall result bucks the trend for HomeInterests titles in general, which were down 5%.

Since its launch 20 years ago, The English Home has become synonymous with the very best of British style, design and good taste.Readers of The English Home value authenticity, sustainability and provenance, a message with great weight in 2020.

The English Garden (group) delivered equally impressive results, showing 3% growth, with a combined circulation of49,803. The English Garden (UK) grew its circulation by 5%, with a rise in both paid-for single copies and paid subscriptions – the largest percentage growth of any premium, high-end gardening title. It has the biggest circulation of any luxury gardening magazine.

TheEnglish Garden also enjoys an extraordinary reach and is the best-selling British gardening magazine abroad – its international circulation is also double that of its nearest competitor. Exclusive photography of the finest gardens andintelligent, in-depth content is at the very heart of TheEnglish Garden. The gardens featured may be classic or contemporary, but are always quintessentially English – a noted point of difference from its competitors.

For more information about The English Home or The English Garden, please contact caroline.scott@chelseamagazines.com

For advertising enquiries, please contact freddy.halliday@chelseamagazines.com

Education

  • Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana – Champaign, 2004
  • M.A., University of Illinois at Urbana – Champaign, 2000
  • B.A., University of Wyoming, 1997

English Garden Home Decor

Areas of Interest

  • Early modern English literature, especially women writers
  • Literature and the Environment
  • Literature and Science
  • Film Studies (especially gender and film)

Current Projects

Mothers of Science: Women, Nature, and Writing in Early Modern English Literature. An ecofeminist literary history of science that examines how the relationship between women and nature in seventeenth-century England made possible women’s marginalization from developing scientific discourse at the same time women used this connection to empower themselves in knowledge-making practices.

Selected Publications and Presentations

The Garden Of Englishhome

Books

The Garden Of English Home Plans

  • Laroche, Rebecca and Jennifer Munroe. Shakespeare and Ecofeminist Theory. Bloomsbury, 2017.
  • Bruckner, Lynne, Jennifer Munroe, and Ed Geisweidt, ed. Ecological Approaches to Early Modern Texts: A Field Guide to Reading and Teaching, Ashgate Press, 2015.
  • Munroe, Jennifer (editorial consultant). Shakespeare and Ecocriticism. Columbia, SC: Layman Poupard Publishing, LLC (part of Shakespearean Criticism series), 2014.
  • Munroe, Jennifer and Rebecca Laroche (Munroe lead author). “Pest Control.” Ed. Joseph Campana and Keith Botelho. Lesser Living Creatures: Insect Life in the Renaissance. Penn State University Press (forthcoming).
  • Munroe, Jennifer and Rebecca Laroche, ed. Ecofeminist Approaches to Early Modernity. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
  • Gender and the Garden in Early Modern English Literature. Ashgate Press, 2008.
  • Making Gardens of Their Own: Gardening Manuals For Women, 1500-1750. Series III. Early Englishwomen in Print. Ashgate Press, 2007.

Articles

English Garden Plants List

English

How To Design An English Garden

  • Munroe, Jennifer. “Women and Gardens.” Women Writers Online. Part of “30 Years, 30 Ideas” Series in Women Writers in Context.
  • Munroe, Jennifer and Rebecca Laroche. “Ecofeminist Studies.” Ed. Evelyn Gajowski. Arden Research Handbook to Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism. Arden/Bloomsbury (forthcoming).

  • Laroche, Rebecca and Jennifer Munroe (equal co-authorship). “Teaching Environmental Justice and Early Modern Texts: The ‘Co’ in Collaboration.” Ed. Wendy Beth Hyman and Hillary Eklund. Teaching Social Justice Through Shakespeare. Edinburgh University Press (forthcoming).
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “Digital Studies At the Margins: Manuscript Sources and Inclusivity.” Shakespeare Newsletter 67(2) 2018: 80-81.

  • Rebecca Laroche, Elaine Leong, Jennifer Munroe, Hillary M. Nunn, Lisa Smith, and Amy L. Tigner (Laroche lead author; others equal co-authorship). “Becoming Visible: Recipes in the Making.” Early Modern Studies Journal. 13(1) 2018: 132-142.
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “Shakespeare and Ecocriticism Reconsidered.” Literature Compass 12.9 (2015): 461-70.
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “Is It Ecocritical If It Isn’t Feminist?” Ed. Jennifer Munroe, Lynne Bruckner, and Ed Geisweidt. Ecological Approaches to Early Modern Texts. Ashgate Press, 2015 (37-50).
  • Munroe, Jennifer and Rebecca Laroche. “On a Bank of Rue; or Material Ecofeminist Inquiry and the Garden of Richard II, Act III, scene iv.” (Shakespeare Studies, 2013).
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “’My innocent diversion of gardening’: Mary Somerset’s Plants.” Renaissance Studies 25: 111-23 (2011). Reprinted in Locus Amoenus. Ed. Alexander Samson. Wiley-Blackwell, 2012, pp. 111-123.
  • Munroe, Jennifer and Rebecca Laroche, ed. “Introduction.” Ecofeminist Approaches to Early Modernity. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011 (1-14).
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “First ‘Mother of Science’: Milton’s Eve, Knowledge, and Nature” In Ecofeminist Approaches to Early Modernity. Ed. Jennifer Munroe and Rebecca Laroche. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011 (37-54).
  • Munroe, Jennifer. “It’s all about the gillyvors: Engendering Art and Nature in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.” In Ecocritical Shakespeare, ed. Lynne Bruckner and Daniel Brayton. Ashgate Press, 2011 (139-54).