Thomas Nashe and His Contemporaries (symposium)
For more past programming from the Folger Institute, please see the article Folger Institute scholarly programs archive.
This was a fall 2017 symposium.
Co-sponsored with “The Thomas Nashe Project” funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (UK), this symposium explores the works and significance of Thomas Nashe (1567 – c.1600), an innovative writer whose influence on prose extends well beyond his own period. Nashe was also a significant dramatist, collaborating with Marlowe, Jonson, and Shakespeare, while his bitter quarrel with the humanist educator, Gabriel Harvey, and his part in the Marprelate controversy expanded the possibilities of English invective and satire. Showcasing the Folger’s exceptional manuscript and print collection of his writings, the symposium will help recover Nashe and his world—especially London, Cambridge, and Great Yarmouth. Session topics will include geographies, oral/aural culture, genres, drama, popular culture, and pamphlets; two dozen participants with relevant projects will be welcomed to join the conversation.
Organizers: Professors Jennifer Richards (Newcastle University), Andrew Hadfield (University of Sussex), Cathy Shrank (University of Sheffield), Joseph Black (University of Massachusetts, Amherst), and Kate De Rycker (Newcastle University) represent “The Thomas Nashe Project,” which will produce a new, multi-volume edition of Nashe’s works for Oxford University Press. They have developed this symposium in collaboration with Drs. Kathleen Lynch and Owen Williams of the Folger Institute.
Schedule
Thursday, 7 September 2017
5:30
- Opening Reception (Founders Room)
7:00
- Prose, Drama, and Orality in the 1590s (Board Room)
- Andrew Hadfield, University of Sussex
- Jennifer Richards, Newcastle University
Friday, 8 September 2017
9:00
- Coffee and Pastries (Folger Board Room)
9:30
- Nashe’s Texts
- Alan Stewart, Columbia University
- Andrew Fleck, University of Texas, El Paso
11:00
- Break
11:30
- Nashe’s Geographies
- Kristen Bennett, Stonehill College
- Steven Mentz, St. John’s University
1:00
- Lunch (on your own)
2:00
- Display of Nashe materials held in the Folger (optional; Deck B seminar room)
3:00
- Nashe and Oral / Aural Culture / Rhetoric
- Heidi Brayman, University of California, Riverside
- Robert Hornback, Oglethorpe University
Saturday, 9 September 2017
9:00
- Coffee and Pastries (Folger Board Room)
9:30
- Nashe’s Genres
- Reid Barbour, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Samuel Fallon, Wesleyan University
11:00
- Break
11:30
- Nashe and Drama
- Joan Pong Linton, Indiana University
- Adam Zucker, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
1:00
- Lunch (on your own)
2:00
- Nashe and Popular Pamphleteering
- Jennifer Andersen, California State University, San Bernardino
- Ian Moulton, Arizona State University
3:30
- Tea
4:00
- Closing Remarks and Discussion
- David Scott Kastan, Yale University
5:00
- Closing Reception (Founders Room)