Previous Folger Institute long-term fellows: Difference between revisions
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'''Mellon Fellows''' | '''Mellon Fellows''' | ||
Alec Ryrie, Reader in Church History, University of Durham | [[Alec Ryrie]], Reader in Church History, University of Durham | ||
:''Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain'' | :''Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain'' | ||
David Schalkwyk, Professor of English, University of Cape Town | [[David Schalkwyk]], Professor of English, University of Cape Town | ||
:''Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries'' | :''Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries'' | ||
'''NEH Fellows''' | '''NEH Fellows''' | ||
[[Jonathan|<nowiki/>]][[Jonathan Gil Harris|Jonathan]][[Jonathan Gil Harris| Gil Harris]], Professor of English, George Washington University | |||
:''Shakespeare and Literary Theory'' | :''Shakespeare and Literary Theory'' | ||
[[Caroline M. Hibbard]], Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | |||
:''A Place at Court: Palaces and Courtiers of Henrietta Maria'' | :''A Place at Court: Palaces and Courtiers of Henrietta Maria'' | ||
[[H. C. Erik Midelfort]], Professor of History, University of Virginia | |||
:''Suppression of Dissent in Early Modern Germany, 1650 – 1750'' | :''Suppression of Dissent in Early Modern Germany, 1650 – 1750'' | ||
'''ACLS/Burkhardt Fellow''' | '''ACLS/Burkhardt Fellow''' | ||
Hannibal Hamlin, Associate Professor of English, The Ohio State University | [[Hannibal Hamlin]], Associate Professor of English, The Ohio State University | ||
:''Shakespeare and Biblical Culture'' | :''Shakespeare and Biblical Culture'' | ||
Revision as of 09:09, 2 September 2014
Folger Institute fellows from previous years. See current Folger long-term fellows for this year's fellows.
2013-2014 long-term fellows
(Mellon) Paul Cefalu, Associate Professor of English, Lafayette College
- The Mind and Body of God: Divine Accommodation and Anthropomorphism in Early Modern English Culture
(NEH) Pamela O. Long, Independent Historian, Washington, DC
- Rebuilding Rome: Knowledge, Power, and Engineering, 1557-1590
(NEH) Paul Menzer, Director, Shakespeare and Performance Graduate Program, Mary Baldwin College
- Shakespeare, Anecdotally
(Folger) Julie Park, Assistant Professor of English, Vassar College
- Dark Rooms and Moving Objects: Mediating Interior Life in Eighteenth-Century England
(Mellon) Daniel Shore, Assistant Professor of English, Georgetown University
- Cyberformalism: The History of Syntactic Forms in the Early Modern Period
2012-2013 long-term fellows
(NEH) Katherine B. Attié, Lecturer in Literature, American University
- Shakespeare's Political Aesthetic
(NEH) Dennis Britton, Assistant Professor of English, University of New Hampshire
- Becoming Christian: Race, Reformation, and Early Modern English Romance
(Folger) Kevin McGinley, Lecturer in Scottish Cultural Studies, Orkney College, University of the Highlands and Islands
- Scottish Drama in Eighteenth-Century America
(Mellon) Dennis Romano, Professor of History, Syracuse University
- Fraud and Deception in Early Modern Italy, c. 1450 to c. 1600
(Mellon) Evelyn Tribble, Professor of English, University of Otago
- Ecologies of Skill in Early Modern England
2011-2012 long-term fellows
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellows
Kathryn Gucer, Independent Scholar, Chicago, IL
- Revolution Across the Channel: Cross-Cultural Information Exchange between Early Modern England and Europe
David Loewenstein, Helen C. White Professor of English and the Humanities, University of Wisconsin, Madison
- Treacherous Faith: Heresy and Demonization in Early Modern English Literature
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellows
Lena Cowen Orlin, Professor of English, Georgetown University
- The Private Life of William Shakespeare
William H. Sherman, Professor of English, University of York
- Knowledge is Power: Renaissance Intelligence and Its Modern Legacies
ACLS/Burkhardt Fellows
David Como, Associate Professor of History, Stanford University
- Radical Parliamentarians and the English Civil War
Jonathan Sheehan, Associate Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley
- Sacrifice: Theology and the Human Sciences in Early Modern Europe
2010-2011 long-term fellows
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellows
Anne E. B. Coldiron, Associate Professor of English (and French), Florida State University
- Printers without Borders: Translation and Transnationalism in Tudor Literature
Claudia Kairoff, Professor of English, Wake Forest University
- The Works of Anne Finch: A Critical Edition
Jennifer Keith, Associate Professor of English, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
- The Works of Anne Finch: A Critical Edition
Jeremy Lopez, Associate Professor of English, University of Toronto
- Anticanons for Early Modern Drama
Andrew W. Mellon Fellows
Jean-Christophe Mayer, Senior Research Fellow, CNRS, and University of Montpellier
- Reading Shakespeare's Early Modern Readers
Marc Schachter, Fellow, Villa I Tatti
- The Uses of Desire: Philology, Epistemology, Politics
2009-2010 long-term fellows
Mellon Fellows
Dympna C. Callaghan, Dean’s Professor in the Humanities, Syracuse University
- Shakespeare in Pieces
Stefano Villani, Recercatore, Dipartimento di Storia, Università di Pisa
- Seventeenth-century English Translations of Italian Books
NEH Fellows
Bradin Cormack, Associate Professor of English, University of Chicago
- Shakespeare’s Substance: A Reading of the Sonnets
Marshall Grossman, Professor of English, University of Maryland
- Reason’s Martyrs: Poetry and Belief in ‘Paradise Regained,’ to which is added, ‘Samson Agonistes’
R. Carter Hailey, Research Associate, College of William & Mary
- The Shakespeare Papers: Paper Stocks of Shakespeare Folios, Quartos, and Octavos to 1640
2008-2009 long-term fellows
Mellon Fellows
Alec Ryrie, Reader in Church History, University of Durham
- Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain
David Schalkwyk, Professor of English, University of Cape Town
- Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries
NEH Fellows
Jonathan Gil Harris, Professor of English, George Washington University
- Shakespeare and Literary Theory
Caroline M. Hibbard, Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- A Place at Court: Palaces and Courtiers of Henrietta Maria
H. C. Erik Midelfort, Professor of History, University of Virginia
- Suppression of Dissent in Early Modern Germany, 1650 – 1750
ACLS/Burkhardt Fellow
Hannibal Hamlin, Associate Professor of English, The Ohio State University
- Shakespeare and Biblical Culture