Previous Folger Institute short-term fellows: Difference between revisions
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[[Folger Institute]] short-term fellows from previous years. See [[Folger Institute 2014–2015 short-term fellows|current Folger Institute short-term fellows]] for this year's fellows. | |||
Katherine Acheson, English, University of Waterloo | ==2014–2015 short-term fellows== | ||
[[Harriet Archer]], English, Newcastle University | |||
:"Reading Poetic Authority in 1570s England: Manuscript Marginalia to English Printed Poetry in the Folger Collection" | |||
[[Tamara Atkin]], English, Queen Mary University of London | |||
:"Play and Book: Drama‚ Reading‚ and the Invention of the Literary in Tudor England" | |||
[[Anna Bertolet]], English, Auburn University | |||
:"Written in Thread on Contested Ground: Gender and Needlework in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Joshua Calhoun]], English, University of Wisconsin-Madison | |||
:"Revising the Past: Ink Blots‚ Erasure‚ and Ecologies of Inscription in Renaissance England" | |||
[[Clare Carroll]], Comparative Literature, Queen’s College, CUNY | |||
:"The Uses of Spenser’s A View of the Present State of Ireland" | |||
[[Antonio Castore]], Humanities, University of Turin | |||
:"Pericles‚ Prince of Tyre: A New Translation and Critical Edition in Italian" | |||
[[Leah Chang]], French, The George Washington University | |||
:"Two Queens: Maternity and the Embodiment of Sovereignty in Early Modern France and England" | |||
[[Katharine Cleland]], English, Virginia Tech University | |||
:"Fictions of Clandestine Marriage in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Rita Costa-Gomes]], History, Towson University | |||
:"A Cartographer’s Tale: Boazio's 1588 View of Santiago" | |||
[[Lezlie Cross]], Drama, University of Washington | |||
:"The Nineteenth-Century Shakespeare Dramaturg: William Winter and Horace Howard Furness" | |||
[[Cesare Cuttica]], English Studies, Paris University | |||
:"Fighting the Monstrous ‘Many-Headed Multitude’: Anti-Democracy in Early Modern England ca. 1580-1640" | |||
[[Surekha Davies]], History, Western Connecticut State University | |||
:"Mapping the Peoples of the New World: Ethnography‚ Imagery, and Knowledge in Renaissance Europe" | |||
[[Vivian Davis]], English, University of Arkansas | |||
:"Genres of the Moment: David Garrick Between Tragedy and Comedy" | |||
[[Eoin Devlin]], History, University of Cambridge | |||
:"British Responses to the Baroque‚ c.1603–c.1797" | |||
[[Derek Dunne]], English, Queen’s University, Belfast | |||
:"Vindictive Justice‚ Participatory Revenge" | |||
[[Rebecca Emmett]], History, St. John’s College, Oxford | |||
:"Publishing Networks in Elizabethan London: The Case of Thomas Man" | |||
[[Alan Galey]], Faculty of Information, University of Toronto | |||
:"Visualizing Variation in Shakespeare and Early Modern Books" | |||
[[David Gehring]], Theology and Religion, Durham University | |||
:"Anglo-German Translations and Travel‚ 1558–1603" | |||
[[Musa Gurnis]], English, Washington University | |||
:"Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London" | |||
[[Vanessa Harding]], History‚ Classics & Archaeology, Birbeck, University of London | |||
:"Richard Smyth (1590–1675) and His Books" | |||
[[Megan Heffernan]], English, DePaul University | |||
:"Each Part Together: Form‚ Collections‚ and the Poetic Imagination in Tottel’s England" | |||
[[Brett Hirsch]], English and Cultural Studies, The University of Western Australia | |||
:"Reproducing Renaissance Drama‚ 1744–2014" | |||
[[Katherine Hunt]], Literature‚ Drama‚ and Creative Writing, University of East Anglia | |||
:"Arts of Variation: Permutational Practices and the Shape of Change in Seventeenth-Century English Writing" | |||
[[Bruce Janacek]], History, North Central College | |||
:"Elias Ashmole: A Study in Virtuosity" | |||
[[Claire Jowitt]], English, University of Southampton | |||
:"Critical Edition of Hakluyt’s The Principal Navigations: Volume XIV" | |||
[[Darcy Kern]], History, McDaniel College | |||
:"Tyranny in Translation: The Reception of Paolo Sarpi in Renaissance England" | |||
[[David Lawrence]], History, Trent University | |||
:"England’s Merchant Soldiers: Civic Militarism and Military Performance in the Early Stuart Period" | |||
[[Kat Lecky]], English, Arkansas State University | |||
:"The Laureate Poetics of Pocket Maps in Renaissance Britain" | |||
[[Catherine Loomis]], English, University of New Orleans | |||
:"The John Jack Promptbook" | |||
[[Fabio Luppi]], Education Science, Roma Tre University | |||
:"New Edition and First Italian Translation of the Jacobean Play by John Marston and Others: ''The Insatiate Countess''" | |||
[[Jack Lynch]], English, Rutgers University | |||
:"The Shakespeare Phantom: The Lives of William Henry Ireland" | |||
[[Kate Narveson]], English, Luther College | |||
:"Resting Assured: Devotional Reading and the Creation of Emotion" | |||
[[Sandrine Parageau]], English Studies, University of Paris, West, Nanterre Nanterre La Défense | |||
:"Spreading the Word of a Woman Kabbalist: A Translation of Anne Conway’s ''The Principles of the Most Ancient and Modern Philosophy'' (1690/1692)" | |||
[[Jared Richman]], English, Colorado College | |||
:"(In)audible Bodies and (In)visible Voices: Elocution and Disability in the Long Eighteenth Century" | |||
[[Leslie Ritchie]], English, Queen’s University | |||
:"David Garrick and the Mediation of Celebrity" | |||
[[Jenny Sager]], English, The University of Nottingham | |||
:"The Friar Bacon Plays: Robert Greene’s ''Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay'' and ''John of Bordeaux''" | |||
[[Anita Sherman]], English, American University | |||
:'"The Skeptical Imagination of Margaret Cavendish" | |||
[[Monika Smialkowska]], Humanities, Northumbria University | |||
:"Shakespeare 1916: Local and Global Perspectives" | |||
[[Courtney Smith]], English, Wesleyan University | |||
:"Empiricist Devotions: Scrutinizing Nature in Early Eighteenth-Century England" | |||
[[Claire Sponsler]], English, The University of Iowa | |||
:"Reading the Beauchamp Pageant" | |||
[[Tatiana String]], Art, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill | |||
:"Masculinity and the Male Body in Renaissance Art" | |||
[[Mark Vareschi]], English, University of Wisconsin-Madison | |||
:"Everywhere and Nowhere: The Anonymous Text‚ 1660–1790" | |||
[[Julianne Werlin]], English, The University of Southern California | |||
:"Informers and Information in Francis Bacon’s Thought" | |||
[[John West]], English, University of Exeter | |||
:"Literature and the Succession of Charles II‚ 1649–1661" | |||
[[Jay Zysk]], English, University of South Florida | |||
:"Shadow and Substance: Reading the Eucharist in Medieval and Early Modern English Drama" | |||
==2013–2014 short–term fellows== | |||
[[Katherine Acheson]], English, University of Waterloo | |||
:“Inscriptions: Writing in Early Modern English Bibles” | :“Inscriptions: Writing in Early Modern English Bibles” | ||
Ronda Arab, English, Simon Fraser University | [[Ronda Arab]], English, Simon Fraser University | ||
:“The Gentleman Apprentice on the Early Modern London Stage” | :“The Gentleman Apprentice on the Early Modern London Stage” | ||
Guyda Armstrong, Italian Studies, University of Manchester | [[Guyda Armstrong]], Italian Studies, University of Manchester | ||
:“Boccaccio in English, | :“Boccaccio in English, 1494–1620” | ||
Kevin Bourque, Writing in the Disciplines, Southwestern University | [[Kevin Bourque]], Writing in the Disciplines, Southwestern University | ||
:“Seriality, Singularity, and Celebrity: Pictures in Motion from | :“Seriality, Singularity, and Celebrity: Pictures in Motion from 1680–1810” | ||
Ian Campbell, Center for Neo-Latin Studies, University College Cork | [[Ian Campbell]], Center for Neo-Latin Studies, University College Cork | ||
:“Protestant Natural Law and Irish Natural Slaves” | :“Protestant Natural Law and Irish Natural Slaves” | ||
Urvashi Chakravarty, English, University of Hawaii at Manoa | [[Urvashi Chakravarty]], English, University of Hawaii at Manoa | ||
:“Serving Like a Free Man: Labor, Liberty, and Consent in Early Modern England” | :“Serving Like a Free Man: Labor, Liberty, and Consent in Early Modern England” | ||
Raz Chen-Morris, History of Science, Bar Ilan University | [[Raz Chen-Morris]], History of Science, Bar Ilan University | ||
:“Vision Contested” | :“Vision Contested” | ||
David Coast, History, Durham University | [[David Coast]], History, Durham University | ||
:“Rumour and Common Fame in Early Stuart Manuscript Miscellanies” | :“Rumour and Common Fame in Early Stuart Manuscript Miscellanies” | ||
Matthew Day, English, Newman University | [[Matthew Day]], English, Newman University | ||
:“Reading the Nation’s Voyages – the Literature of Travel and the Nature of English Nationalism” | :“Reading the Nation’s Voyages – the Literature of Travel and the Nature of English Nationalism” | ||
Eric Dursteler, History, Brigham Young University (SCSC/Folger Fellow) | [[Eric Dursteler]], History, Brigham Young University (SCSC/Folger Fellow) | ||
:“Around the Mediterranean Table: Foodways and Identity in the Early Modern Era” | :“Around the Mediterranean Table: Foodways and Identity in the Early Modern Era” | ||
Amy Froide, History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County | [[Amy Froide]], History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County | ||
:“Women’s Financial Literacy in Early Modern England” | :“Women’s Financial Literacy in Early Modern England” | ||
Nathan Garvey, English, University of Queensland | [[Nathan Garvey]], English, University of Queensland | ||
:“Jane Garland/Lowndes: Printer to the Drury Lane Theatre (fl. | :“Jane Garland/Lowndes: Printer to the Drury Lane Theatre (fl. 1777–1824)” | ||
David George, English, Urbana University | [[David George]], English, Urbana University | ||
:“A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare’s Coriolanus” | :“A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare’s Coriolanus” | ||
Katherine Gillen, English, Texas A&M University, San Antonio | [[Katherine Gillen]], English, Texas A&M University, San Antonio | ||
:“Chaste Value: Economic Crises, Sexual Anxiety, and Construction of Identity in Early Modern Drama” | :“Chaste Value: Economic Crises, Sexual Anxiety, and Construction of Identity in Early Modern Drama” | ||
Ken Gouwens, History, University of Connecticut | [[Ken Gouwens]], History, University of Connecticut | ||
:“Defining Human Exceptionalism” | :“Defining Human Exceptionalism” | ||
John Gouws, English, North-West University | [[John Gouws]], English, North-West University | ||
:“Clarendon Edition of the Works of Fulke Greville” | :“Clarendon Edition of the Works of Fulke Greville” | ||
David Greer, Music, Durham University | [[David Greer]], Music, Durham University | ||
:“An Edition of Manuscript Music in Printed Sources” | :“An Edition of Manuscript Music in Printed Sources” | ||
Tobias Gregory, English, The Catholic University of America | [[Tobias Gregory]], English, The Catholic University of America | ||
:“Milton’s Strenuous Liberty” | :“Milton’s Strenuous Liberty” | ||
Huw Griffiths, English, University of Sydney | [[Huw Griffiths]], English, University of Sydney | ||
:“Love, Desire, and Friendship Between Men in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Adaptations of Shakespeare” | :“Love, Desire, and Friendship Between Men in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Adaptations of Shakespeare” | ||
William Hauptman, Independent Scholar, Lausanne, Switzerland | [[William Hauptman]], Independent Scholar, Lausanne, Switzerland | ||
:“Samuel Hieronymus Grimm’s Shakespeare Illustration in the Folger” | :“Samuel Hieronymus Grimm’s Shakespeare Illustration in the Folger” | ||
Richard Hoyle, History, University of Reading | [[Richard Hoyle]], History, University of Reading | ||
:“Popular Royalism in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century” | :“Popular Royalism in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century” | ||
Miriam Jacobson, English, University of Georgia | [[Miriam Jacobson]], English, University of Georgia | ||
:“Renaissance Undead: Resurrecting the Past in Early Modern England” | :“Renaissance Undead: Resurrecting the Past in Early Modern England” | ||
Christopher Johnson, English, University of California, Los Angeles | [[Christopher Johnson]], English, University of California, Los Angeles | ||
:“Squaring the Circle: Representing Self and World in The Anatomy of Melancholy” | :“Squaring the Circle: Representing Self and World in The Anatomy of Melancholy” | ||
Ben Labreche, English, University of Mary Washington | [[Ben Labreche]], English, University of Mary Washington | ||
:“Liberty Agonistes: Milton and Modern Freedom” | :“Liberty Agonistes: Milton and Modern Freedom” | ||
Katherine Larson, English, University of Toronto | [[Katherine Larson]], English, University of Toronto | ||
:“The Singing Body in Early Modern England” | :“The Singing Body in Early Modern England” | ||
Dmitri Levitin, History, Trinity College, Cambridge | [[Dmitri Levitin]], History, Trinity College, Cambridge | ||
:“The Historicization of Religion and Theology, c. | :“The Historicization of Religion and Theology, c. 1580–1720” | ||
Christopher Matusiak, English, Ithaca College | [[Christopher Matusiak]], English, Ithaca College | ||
:“A Critical Edition of Robert Greene’s Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay” | :“A Critical Edition of Robert Greene’s Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay” | ||
Agnes Matuska, English, University of Szeged | [[Agnes Matuska]], English, University of Szeged | ||
:“Early Modern Version of the Theatrum Mundi, and our Contemporary Perspectives” | :“Early Modern Version of the Theatrum Mundi, and our Contemporary Perspectives” | ||
Valerie McGowan-Doyle, History, Lorain County Community College | [[Valerie McGowan-Doyle]], History, Lorain County Community College | ||
:“Violence Against Women in Sixteenth-Century Ireland” | :“Violence Against Women in Sixteenth-Century Ireland” | ||
Stephanie Morley, English, Saint Mary’s University | [[Stephanie Morley]], English, Saint Mary’s University | ||
:“Lady Margaret Beaufort: The Imitation of Christ, Book IV, The Mirror of Gold to the Sinful Soul – a Critical Edition” | :“Lady Margaret Beaufort: The Imitation of Christ, Book IV, The Mirror of Gold to the Sinful Soul – a Critical Edition” | ||
Louise Noble, School of Arts, University of New England (Australia) | [[Louise Noble]], School of Arts, University of New England (Australia) | ||
:“The Changing Waterscape in Early Modern Rural England” | :“The Changing Waterscape in Early Modern Rural England” | ||
Sarah Noonan, English, Lindenwood University | [[Sarah Noonan]], English, Lindenwood University | ||
:“The Book in Parts: Selective Reading Practices in Late Medieval England” | :“The Book in Parts: Selective Reading Practices in Late Medieval England” | ||
Shormishtha Panja, English, University of Delhi | [[Shormishtha Panja]], English, University of Delhi | ||
:“Shakespeare, Boydell and Bengal” | :“Shakespeare, Boydell and Bengal” | ||
Vimala Pasupathi, Theatre, Hofstra University | [[Vimala Pasupathi]], Theatre, Hofstra University | ||
:“The Militia Theatre, | :“The Militia Theatre, 1560–1660: Playing the Soldier in English Drama and British History” | ||
Teresa Prudente, Humanities, University of Turin | [[Teresa Prudente]], Humanities, University of Turin | ||
:“The Two Noble Kinsmen: a New Translation and Critical Edition in Italian” | :“The Two Noble Kinsmen: a New Translation and Critical Edition in Italian” | ||
Maria Anne Purciello, Music History, University of Delaware | [[Maria Anne Purciello]], Music History, University of Delaware | ||
:“Artistry, Rhetoric and … Laughter? Rethinking the ‘Comic’ in 17th-Century Opera” | :“Artistry, Rhetoric and … Laughter? Rethinking the ‘Comic’ in 17th-Century Opera” | ||
Mark Rankin, English, James Madison University (RSA/Folger Fellow) | [[Mark Rankin]], English, James Madison University (RSA/Folger Fellow) | ||
:“William Tyndale’s Practice of Prelates (1530) and the Nature of Reading in Renaissance England” | :“William Tyndale’s Practice of Prelates (1530) and the Nature of Reading in Renaissance England” | ||
Lucy Razzall, English, Emmanuel College, Cambridge | [[Lucy Razzall]], English, Emmanuel College, Cambridge | ||
:“Printed Repositories in Early Modern England” | :“Printed Repositories in Early Modern England” | ||
Letha Clair Robertson, Art History, University of Texas, Tyler | [[Letha Clair Robertson]], Art History, University of Texas, Tyler | ||
:“Marketing the Theatrical Celebrity: Thomas Hicks’s Portraits of Edwin Booth” | :“Marketing the Theatrical Celebrity: Thomas Hicks’s Portraits of Edwin Booth” | ||
Benedict Robinson, English, Stony Brook University | [[Benedict Robinson]], English, Stony Brook University | ||
:“Feeling Words: An Early Modern Philology of the Affections” | :“Feeling Words: An Early Modern Philology of the Affections” | ||
Claire Sponsler, English, University of Iowa | [[Claire Sponsler]], English, University of Iowa | ||
:“Reading the Beauchamp Pageant” | :“Reading the Beauchamp Pageant” | ||
Andrew Strycharski, English, Florida International University | [[Andrew Strycharski]], English, Florida International University | ||
:“Philip Sidney, Community, and the Reformation’s Passionate Ethics” | :“Philip Sidney, Community, and the Reformation’s Passionate Ethics” | ||
Edward (Mac) Test, English, Boise State University | [[Edward (Mac) Test]], English, Boise State University | ||
:“Cochineal: From Myth to Market” | :“Cochineal: From Myth to Market” | ||
Clotilde Thouret, Comparative Literature, University of Paris-Sorbonne | [[Clotilde Thouret]], Comparative Literature, University of Paris-Sorbonne | ||
:“Defending the Theater, from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment: Knowledge, Effects and Uses of a Controversial Art” | :“Defending the Theater, from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment: Knowledge, Effects and Uses of a Controversial Art” | ||
Lucy Underwood, Theology, Durham University | [[Lucy Underwood]], Theology, Durham University | ||
:“‘Out of a heretical nation’: English Catholic Representations of Protestant England and their Reception” | :“‘Out of a heretical nation’: English Catholic Representations of Protestant England and their Reception” | ||
Denise Walen, Theatre, Vassar College | [[Denise Walen]], Theatre, Vassar College | ||
:“Dethroning Margaret” | :“Dethroning Margaret” | ||
Elizabeth Williamson, Independent Scholar, London | [[Elizabeth Williamson]], Independent Scholar, London | ||
:“Henry Unton and the Afterlives of Letters: Copies, Counterfeits, and the Construction of History” | :“Henry Unton and the Afterlives of Letters: Copies, Counterfeits, and the Construction of History” | ||
Carl Wise, Hispanic Studies, College of Charleston | [[Carl Wise]], Hispanic Studies, College of Charleston | ||
:“Doctrines on Display: Baroque Theologies in the Theater of Antonio Mira de Amescua” | :“Doctrines on Display: Baroque Theologies in the Theater of Antonio Mira de Amescua” | ||
David Worrall, English, Nottingham Trent University | [[David Worrall]], English, Nottingham Trent University | ||
:“Sarah Siddons and Edmund Kean’s Drury Lane Audiences” | :“Sarah Siddons and Edmund Kean’s Drury Lane Audiences” | ||
==2012–2013 short-term fellows== | |||
[[Marco Barducci]], Political Thought, University of Florence | |||
:"Hugo Grotius and the Reception of De imperio summarum potestatum circa sacra in the English Revolution, 1640–1660" | |||
[[Clara Calvo]], English, University of Murcia | |||
:"Shakespeare and the Cultures of Commemoration" | |||
[[Ian Campbell]], History, Trinity College Dublin | |||
:"Protestant Natural Law and Irish Natural Slaves" | |||
[[Brinda Charry]], English, Keene State College | |||
:"‘Imperfect Men:’ Eunuchs, The East, and Early Modern English Drama" | |||
[[Matthew Davies]], IHR, University of London | |||
:"London 1300–1550" | |||
[[Chad Van Dixhoorn]], History, Reformed Theological Seminary | |||
:"The Westminster Assembly and the Pulpit" | |||
[[Eric Dursteler]], History, Brigham Young University | |||
:"Around the Mediterranean Table: Foodways and Identity in the Early Modern Era" | |||
[[J. Caitlin Finlayson]], English, University Michigan-Dearborn | |||
:"Stephen Harrison’s The Arches of Triumph: James I’s London Royal Entry and the Architectural Representation of Majesty" | |||
[[John Garrison]], English, Carroll University | |||
:"Enriching Friendship" | |||
[[Gail McMurray Gibson]], English, Davidson College | |||
:"Sir Kenelm Digby, Cultures of Recusancy, and The Digby Plays" | |||
[[Colette Gordon]], English, University of Cape Town | |||
:"Shakespeare’s Play of Credit" | |||
[[Lianne Habinek]], Literature, Bard College | |||
:"Such Wondrous Science: Metaphor and the Birth of Neuroscience in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Susan Harlan]], English, Wake Forest University | |||
:"Objects of War: Military Dress, Memory, and the Making of the Early Modern English Subject" | |||
[[Johanna Harris]], English, University of Exeter | |||
:"The Collected Works of Thomas Traherne Volume III" | |||
[[Christopher Highley]], English, Ohio State University | |||
:"The Blackfriars Neighborhood: God’s House and Playhouse" | |||
[[Wendy Hyman]], English, Oberlin College | |||
:"Skeptical Seductions: Carpe Diem Poetry and the Eroticism of Doubt" | |||
[[Stacey Jocoy]], Musicology, Texas Tech University | |||
:"John Playford and the Evolution of The Introduction to the Skill of Musick" | |||
[[Erin Kelly]], English, University of Victoria | |||
:"Performing Religious Conversion in Early Modern England" | |||
:Sixteenth-Century Studies/Folger Fellow | |||
[[Gerard Kilroy]], English, University College London | |||
:"Edmund Campion and William Shakespeare: an Uncertain Connection" | |||
[[Natasha Korda]], English, Wesleyan University | |||
:"Sister Arts: Theater and Visual Culture in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Douglas Lanier]], English, University of New Hampshire | |||
:"America’s Shakespeare Commemorated: 1864, 1916, 1964" | |||
[[John Lavagnino]], English, King’s College London | |||
:"The Death and Rebirth of Early Modern Drama" | |||
[[Yu Liu]], English, Niagara County Community College | |||
:"Harmonious Disagreement: Matteo Ricci and his Closest Chinese Friends" | |||
[[Brian Lockey]], English, St. John’s University | |||
:"The Pope’s Scholars: Catholics, Royalists, and Cosmopolitans Writing at the Margins of Early Modern England" | |||
[[Cecilia Maier-Kapoor]], Modern Languages and Literatures, Pace University | |||
:"Platonic Love Reconsidered: The Role of Medicine in Francesco Cattani da Diacceto’s ‘I tre libre d’amore’ (1561)" | |||
[[Howard Marchitello]], English, Rutgers University-Camden | |||
:"The Diary Notebooks of Reverend John Ward: Early Modern ‘Science in Action’" | |||
[[Rupali Mishra]], History, Auburn University | |||
:"A business of state: the meanings of the East India Company and English State in London and Asia in the 17th Century" | |||
[[Paul Musselwhite]], History, University of Glasgow | |||
:"Conceiving the Plantation Town: Civic Structures in English Atlantic Debate" | |||
:American Historical Association/Folger Fellow | |||
[[Marcy North]], English, Pennsylvania State University | |||
:"Scribal Labor and the Exercise of Taste in Post-Print Manuscript Culture" | |||
[[Kara Northway]], English, Kansas State University | |||
:"Actors’ Letters" | |||
[[Monique O’Connell]], History, Wake Forest University | |||
:"Constructing Narratives, Building Empire: Renaissance Republicanism and Venetian Expansion" | |||
[[Elizabeth Patton]], Humanities, Johns Hopkins University | |||
:"Reading the Rosary and Marking its Absence: Readers’ Marks and the Reformation History of the “beads” and the Little Office of the Virgin" | |||
[[Chiara Petrolini]], Renaissance Studies, Balzan Foundation | |||
:"Between Two Worlds: a Critical edition of A True Historicall Conversion of Sir Tobie Matthew" | |||
[[Nicholas Popper]], History, College of William and Mary | |||
:"Edmund Tilney’s Topographical Descriptions and Elizabethan Political Culture" | |||
[[Todd Reeser]], French and Italian, University of Pittsburgh | |||
:"Setting Plato Straight: Translating Ancient Sexuality in the Renaissance" | |||
[[Colleen Rosenfeld]], English, Pomona College | |||
:"Indecorous Thinking: Poetic Figures and the Production of Knowledge in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Julia Schleck]], English, University of Nebraska, Lincoln | |||
:"The Genres of Early Capitalism" | |||
[[Deneen Senasi]], English, Mercer University | |||
:"Companionate Reading, Coincidental Inscription, and the Associated Name: George Eliot, George Henry Lewes, and the Works of Shakespeare" | |||
[[Daniel Smith]], English, University of Reading | |||
:"Early Modern Manuscripts at the Folger: The Conways, John Donne, and Bess of Hardwick" | |||
[[Scott Sowerby]], History, Northwestern University | |||
:"Acquisitive Cosmopolitanism and the Early British Empire, 1660–1720" | |||
[[Elizabeth Spiller]], English, Florida State University | |||
:"The Sense of Matter: Science, Matter Theory, and Literary Creations in the Renaissance" | |||
[[Felicity Stout]], Humanities, Nottingham Trent University | |||
:"Richard Hakluyt’s The Principal Navigations: a New Critical Edition of V.4, the Russian Material" | |||
[[Kristina Straub]], English, Carnegie Mellon University | |||
:"Shakespearean Performance and the Sexual Imaginary of 18th-Century London Theatre" | |||
[[Rivka Swenson]], English, Virginia Commonwealth University | |||
:"Before Unionism: Parts, Wholes, and Aesthetic Politics, 1603–1707" | |||
[[Patrick Tuite]], Drama, Catholic University of America | |||
:"Dramaturgy in the Age of Monarch | |||
[[Lucy Underwood]], History, Independent Scholar | |||
:"Imagining Englands: Confessionalization and National Identity after the English Reformation" | |||
[[Susan Wabuda]], History, Fordham University | |||
:"Cranmer’s Women" | |||
==2011–2012 short-term fellows== | |||
[[Sharon Achinstein]], Reader in English Renaissance Literature, University of Oxford | |||
:“The Life and Death of the Sonnet in the Seventeenth Century” | |||
:(One month, 19 July - 15 August '11) | |||
[[Carlo Bajetta]], Chair of English, Università della Valle d’Aosta | |||
:“‘Knowledge of all tongues’: The Foreign Letters of Elizabeth I” | |||
:(Three months, June – August '12) | |||
[[Alex Barber]], Lecturer of Early Modern History, University of Durham | |||
:“John Dyer and Scribal News” | |||
:(One month, September ’11) | |||
[[Mark Bland]], Senior Lecturer, De Montfort University | |||
:“The Poems of Ben Jonson” | |||
:(Two months, 25 July – 25 September ’11) | |||
[[Andrew Boyle]], Lecturer in History, Brasenose College, Oxford | |||
:“Samuel Daniel’s Collection of the History of England” | |||
:(Three months, April – June ’12) | |||
[[Alan Bryson]], Research Associate and Tutor of English, Sheffield University | |||
:“Lordship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI” | |||
:(Two months, March – May ’12) | |||
[[Christopher Burlinson]], Fellow and College Lecturer in English, Jesus College Cambridge | |||
:“The Poems of Richard Corbett: A Social Edition” | |||
:(One month, 16 January - 17 February '12) | |||
[[Marie-Louise Coolahan]], Lecturer in English, National University of Ireland, Galway | |||
:“Gender and the Construction of Authorship in the Early Modern Period” | |||
:(One month, March '12) | |||
[[Krystyna Kujawinska Courtney]], Professor, Vice Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Łódź | |||
:“Helena Modjeska’s Career in the USA” | |||
:(Two months, August - September '11) | |||
[[Kevin Curran]], Assistant Professor of English, University of North Texas | |||
:“The Revels Plays Edition of Samuel Daniel’s Tragedy of Philotas” | |||
:(One month, June ’12) | |||
[[Elizabeth Evenden]], Lecturer in Book History, Brunel University | |||
:“Early Modern Propaganda and Printing in England and Portugal” | |||
:(Two months, 16 July – 16 September ’11) | |||
[[Jill R. Fehleison]], Associate Professor of History, Quinnipiac University | |||
:“Hearsay or Truth? Catholic/Protestant Polemics and the Maintenance of Religious Difference” | |||
:(One month, June ’12) | |||
[[Kenneth Fincham]], Professor of History, University of Kent | |||
:“Episcopacy and the Church of England, 1630-1670” | |||
:(Two months, tbd) | |||
[[Frances Gage]], Assistant Professor of Renaissance and Baroque Art, SUNY Buffalo | |||
:“Visual Cures: Painting as Medicine in Early Modern Italy” | |||
:(Two months, March – April ’12) | |||
[[Gail McMurray Gibson]], Professor of English and Humanities, Davidson College | |||
:“Cox Macro, The Macro Plays, and the Ghosts of an East Anglian Past” | |||
:(One month, November ’11) | |||
[[Paul Goring]], Professor of English, Norwegian University of Science and Technology | |||
:“Charles Macklin and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Culture” | |||
:(Two months, October – November ’11) | |||
[[Joel Halcomb]], Teaching Assistant in History, University of St. Andrews | |||
:“Colonel Robert Bennett: Puritan Political Pragmatism and Religious Radicalism in the English Revolution” | |||
:(Three months, tbd) | |||
[[Margaret Hannay]], Professor of English, Siena College | |||
:“Appropriating David in the Renaissance” | |||
:(One month, 16 March – 15 April ’12) | |||
[[Maria Hayward]], Reader in Early Modern History, University of Southampton | |||
:“Courting Gloriana: Gift Giving as a Means of Social Advancement at the Court of Elizabeth I” | |||
:(One month, February ’12) | |||
[[Robert Hornback]], Associate Professor of English, Oglethorpe University | |||
:“Early Blackface Fools and Transnational Proto-Racism” | |||
:(Three months, December '11, May-June '12) | |||
[[Alexa Huang]], Associate Professor of English, George Washington University/Research Affiliate in Literature, MIT | |||
:“Shakespeare and East Asia” | |||
:(Three months, January – March ’12) | |||
[[Michael Rodman Jones]], Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge | |||
:“Protestant Medievalism” | |||
:(One month, March – April ’12) | |||
[[Andras Kisery]], Assistant Professor of English, City College of New York, CUNY | |||
:“Politicians in Show: Early Jacobean Drama and the Socialization of Political Competence” | |||
:(Three months, February – April ’12) | |||
[[Laura L. Knoppers]], Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University | |||
:“Literature, Luxury, and Nationhood in Milton’s England” | |||
:(One month, February ’12) | |||
[[Julian Lamb]], Assistant Professor of English, Chinese University of Hong Kong | |||
:“Early Modern Orthography, Language Reform, and Wittgenstein” | |||
:(Three months, June – August ’11) | |||
[[Carole Levin]], Willa Cather Professor of History, University of Nebraska | |||
:“Fantasies and Representations of the Sixteenth-Century Dead in the Stuart England Political World Imaginary” | |||
:(Two months, December ’11 – January ’12) | |||
[[Lia Markey]], Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Penn Humanities Forum, University of Pennsylvania | |||
:“Renaissance Invention, Collaboration and Process in Stradano’s Nova Reperte” | |||
:(One month, March '12) | |||
[[Jeanne McCarthy]], Assistant Professor of English, Oglethorpe University | |||
:“Schooling the Drama: The Children’s Tradition and the Transformation of Renaissance English Theater” | |||
:(Three months, December '11, May-June '12) | |||
[[Kevin McGinley]], Lecturer in Scottish Cultural Studies, University of the Highland and Islands | |||
:“Scotland on the Late Eighteenth-Century American Stage” | |||
:(Three months, July – September ’11) | |||
[[Hiram Morgan]], Professor of History, University College, Cork | |||
:“Bacon and Ireland: An Annotated Reader” | |||
:(Six weeks, tbd) | |||
[[Simon P. Newman]], Sir Denis Brogan Professor of American History, University of Glasgow | |||
:“Race and Bound Labour in the British Atlantic World” | |||
:(Three months, July – September ’11) | |||
[[Warren Oakley]], Independent Scholar, UK | |||
:“Tracing the Theatrical Life of Robert Harris” | |||
:(Two months, March – April ’12) | |||
[[Viorel Panaite]], Professor of Islamic-Ottoman History, University of Bucharest | |||
:“Western Navigation, Consuls and Piracy in the Ottoman Mediterranean (16th-17th centuries)” | |||
:(Three months, December ’11 – February ’12) | |||
[[Veronika Schandl]], Associate Professor of English Literature, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Hungary | |||
:“Elizabethan and Jacobean Theaters: The Stage and its Social Context” | |||
:(Three months, February – May ’12) | |||
[[Hilda Smith]], Professor of History, University of Cincinnati | |||
:“Images of Tradeswomen in Early Modern Literature and Art” | |||
:(Three months, March – May ’12) | |||
[[Tracey Sowerby]], Departmental Lecturer in Early Modern History, St. Hilda’s College Oxford | |||
:“Tudor Diplomatic Culture” | |||
:(One month, 20 July - 19 August '11) | |||
[[Alan Stewart]], Professor of English, Columbia University | |||
:“French Shakespeare” | |||
:(Three months, September - November '11) | |||
[[Mihoko Suzuki]], Professor of English, University of Miami | |||
:“Antigone’s Example: Gender, History, and the Politics of Civil War in Early Modern England and France” | |||
:(One month, October ’11) | |||
[[Carlo Taviani]], Ricercatore, Istituto Storico Italo Germanico di Trento | |||
:“Privatized States: European Companies and their Colonies from the Bank of San Giorgio to the English East India Company” | |||
:(Three months, January – March ’12) | |||
[[Valerie Wayne]], Professor of English, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa | |||
:“Introduction to Arden 3 Cymbeline” | |||
:(Two months, April – May ’12) | |||
[[Bronwen Wilson]], Associate Professor of Art History, University of British Columbia | |||
:“Journeys to Constantinople: Inscription, the Horizon, and Duration in Early Modern Travel Imagery” | |||
:(Two months, September '11, June '12) | |||
[[Laura Lehua Yim]], Assistant Professor of English, San Francisco State University | |||
:“Fluid Propriety: Water and Authority in Spenser and Shakespeare” | |||
:(Three months, August - October) | |||
==2010–2011 short-term fellows== | |||
[[Charles Beem]], Associate Professor of History, University of North Carolina, Pembroke | |||
:“Lord of Misrule: The Life and Times of George Ferrers” | |||
:(One month, March '11) | |||
[[Sara Brooks]], Lecturer, Princeton University | |||
:“Instituting Bodies, Interpreting Ancient Order: Predecessors and Protestant Institution Building” | |||
:(Two months, July – August '10) | |||
[[Piers Brown]], Post-doctoral Fellow, University of York | |||
:“Donne and the Situation of Literate Work in Early Modern England” | |||
:(Two months, September – October '10) | |||
[[Mark Thornton Burnett]], Professor of Renaissance Studies, Queen’s University, Belfast | |||
:“Shakespeare and World Cinema” | |||
:(One month, April '11) | |||
[[David Carnegie]], Professor of Theatre, Victoria University of Wellington | |||
:“Works of John Webster, V. 4” | |||
:(Three months, April – June '11) | |||
[[Kathleen Comerford]], Professor of History, Georgia Southern University | |||
:“Jesuit Foundations and Medici Power, 1541–1700” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Ambereen Dadabhoy]], Lecturer in Western Languages and Literature, Bogazici University | |||
:“The Stage Turk: Suleyman the Magnificent on the English Stage” | |||
:(Three months, March – May '11) | |||
[[Jason Denman]], Associate Professor of English, Utica College | |||
:“Artificial Shadows: The Skepticism of Seventeenth-Century English Tragedy” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Francesca Di Blasio]], Assistant Professor of English Literature, University of Trento | |||
:“The Antipodes in Early Modern Account: Heresy, Utopia, and Travel” | |||
:(Three months, February – March '11) | |||
[[Cary Di Pietro]], Sessional Lecturer II in English and Drama, University of Toronto at Mississauga | |||
:“Seeing through Shakespeare: Visual Culture and Performance in England, 1660–1960” | |||
:(One month, December '10) | |||
[[Jeffrey Doty]], Assistant Professor of English, West Texas A & M University | |||
:“Popularity and Publicity in Shakespeare’s Theater” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Julie Eckerle]], Assistant Professor of English, University of Minnesota, Morris | |||
:“Romancing the Self: A Study of Early Modern English-Women’s Life Writing” | |||
:(One month, June '11) | |||
[[Ian Gadd]], Senior Lecturer in English, Bath Spa University | |||
:“Copyright and Corporate Publishing in the Stationers’ Company, 1617–1710” | |||
:(Four months, January through July '11) | |||
[[Anthony Guneratne]], Associate Professor of Communication, Florida Atlantic University | |||
:“Rediscovering Shakespeare: the Role of Archives in Reconstructing the Shakespeare Film Canon” | |||
:(Two months, March – April '11) | |||
[[Karl Gunther]], Assistant Professor of History, University of Miami | |||
:“The Ideological Origins of English Puritanism, 1525–1590” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[R. Carter Hailey]], Research Associate, The College of William and Mary | |||
:“The Shakespeare Papers” | |||
:(Three months, September – November '10) | |||
[[Jeffery Hankins]], Assistant Professor of History, Louisiana Tech University | |||
:“The Dangerous Days of Religious Refugees” | |||
:(Six weeks, tbd) | |||
[[Jacob Heil]], Independent Scholar, Baltimore, MD | |||
:“Making Poems: A Bibliographic Investigation of Poems by J.D.” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Jonathan Hsy]], Assistant Professor of English, George Washington University | |||
:“Polyglot Production: Multilingual Writing and London Trade, 1340–1540” | |||
:(Three months, September – November '10) | |||
[[Mariko Ichikawa]], Professor [of English], Tohoku University | |||
:“A Study of Early Modern Basic Theatrical Terms” | |||
:(Three months, April – June '11) | |||
[[Robert Jones]], Senior Lecturer in English, University of Leeds | |||
:“Mary Tickell’s Letters to her Sister” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Sean Keilen]], Associate Professor of English, College of William and Mary | |||
:“Circle of Affection: Imitation and Tradition in Renaissance Poetry” | |||
:(Three months, June – August '10) | |||
[[Gerard Kilroy]], Honorary Visiting Professor, University College London | |||
:“’Beyond the sownde of tounge or quill’: the Impact, in Print and in Manuscript, of Edmund Campion, S.J.” | |||
:(Three months, tbd) | |||
[[Brian Lockey]], Associate Professor of English, St. John’s University | |||
:“Catholics, Royalists, Cosmopolitans: Writing at the Margins of Early Modern England” | |||
:(One month, March '11) | |||
[[Jesus López-Peláez Casellas]], Associate Professor of English, University of Jaén | |||
:“The Representation of the Muslim, Jewish, and Spanish Other in the Construction of the English Early Modern Identity” | |||
:(Six weeks, July – August '10) | |||
[[Katherine Maynard]], Associate Professor of French, Washington College | |||
:“Guillaume Du Bartas’ Epic Endeavors” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Richard C. McCoy]], Professor of English, Queens College, CUNY | |||
:“Faith in Shakespeare” | |||
:(Two months, November – December '10) | |||
[[David McInnis]], Ph.D. Candidate (degree in hand by time of residence), University of Melbourne | |||
:“The Lost Plays Database (lostplays.org)” | |||
:(One month, February '11) | |||
[[Dieter Mehl]], Professor Emeritus of English, University of Bonn | |||
:“A Variorum Edition of Shakespeare’s ‘Poems’” | |||
:(Two months, May – June '11) | |||
[[Shannon Miller]], Professor of English, Temple University | |||
:“On the Margins of History: Studies in Pamphlet Collections” | |||
:(Three months, March – May '11) | |||
[[Melissa Mowry]], Associate Professor of English, St. John’s University | |||
:“Ties that Bind: The Hermeneutics of Collectivity and the English Literary Imagination, 1642–1748” | |||
:(Three months, August – October '10) | |||
[[Alan H. Nelson]], Professor Emeritus of English, University of California, Berkeley | |||
:“The Library, Manuscripts, Life, and Opinions of Richard Smith (1590–1675)” | |||
:(Three months, September – November '10) | |||
[[Webster Newbold]], Associate Professor of English, Ball State University | |||
:“The English Secretary by Angel Day: a Critical Edition” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Corinne Noirot-Maguire]], Assistant Professor of French, Virginia Tech | |||
:“Jean de la Taille’s Dramatic Quill” | |||
:(One month, March '11) | |||
[[Veronica O’Mara]], Senior Lecturer, University of Hull | |||
:“A Critical Edition of Thomas Wimbledon’s Paul’s Cross Sermon of c. 1387” | |||
:(One month, May '11) | |||
[[Jose Roberto O’Shea]], Professor of English, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina | |||
:“Annotated Verse Translation of Shakespeare’s Two Noble Kinsmen” | |||
:(Three months, August – October '10) | |||
[[Lena Cowen Orlin]], Professor of English, Georgetown University | |||
:“The Textual Life of Things in Early Modern England” | |||
:(Two months, June – September '10) | |||
[[Mark Rankin]], Assistant Professor of English, James Madison University | |||
:“The Myth of Henry VIII in Early Modern England” | |||
:(Three months, January – March '11) | |||
[[Dosia Reichardt]], Lecturer, James Cook University | |||
:“‘Death in a New Dress’: Seventeenth-Century Comic Elegies and the Culture of Mourning” | |||
:(One month, November '10) | |||
[[Kate Rumbold]], Research Fellow, Shakespeare Institute, Birmingham | |||
:“Shakespeare Anthologized” | |||
:(Two months, June – July '11) | |||
[[Monica Santini]], Research Fellow, University of Padua | |||
:“The Queen’s Other Isle: Elizabeth I’s Letters to Ireland” | |||
:(Two months, October – November '10) | |||
[[Kathryn Schwarz]], Associate Professor of English, Vanderbilt University | |||
:“Counterfactual Women: Femininity and Teleology in Early Modern England” | |||
:(Three months, October – December '10) | |||
[[Marlis Schweitzer]], Assistant Professor of Theatre, York University | |||
:“Bringing the World to Broadway: Tracking the Transnational Trade in Theatrical Commodities” | |||
:(Two months, tbd) | |||
[[Jessica Sharkey]], Research Fellow, Wolfson College, Cambridge | |||
:“Thomas Wolsey’s Reputation and its European Context” | |||
:(Three months, September – November) | |||
[[Ian Smith]], Professor of English, Lafayette College | |||
:“Fabricated Identities: Racial Cross-Dressing on the Early Modern Stage” | |||
:(One month, October '10) | |||
[[Abraham Stoll]], Associate Professor of English, University of San Diego | |||
:“Thus Conscience in Early Modern England” | |||
:(One month, June '10) | |||
[[Felicity Stout]], Research Associate, University of Sheffield | |||
:“Giles Fletcher the Elder and the Elizabethan Commonwealth” | |||
:(Two months, July – August '10) | |||
[[Catherine Thomas]], Assistant Professor of English, College of Charleston | |||
:“Shakespeare and the Graphic Arts: Sketching the Past” | |||
:(One month, March '10) | |||
[[Anke Timmermann]], Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Glasgow | |||
:“How Bess of Hardwick Read the News” | |||
:(One month, May – June '11) | |||
[[David Trim]], Honorary Research Fellow, University of Reading | |||
:“Tyranny, Resistance, and the Calvinist Ideology of Holy War, 1560–1650” | |||
:(Three months, August – September '10) | |||
[[Angus Vine]], Lecturer in Early Modern Literature, University of Sussex | |||
:“Manuscripts, Merchants, and Miscellanea” | |||
:(One month, July – August '10) | |||
[[Andrew Walkling]], Dean’s Assistant Professor of Early Modern Studies, SUNY, Binghamton | |||
:“Instruments of Absolutism: Restoration Court Culture and the Epideictic Mode” | |||
:(Three months, April – June '11) | |||
[[J. Christopher Warner]], Professor of English, Le Moyne College | |||
:“Tottel’s Miscellany in the Marian Book Market” | |||
:(Three months, December '10 – February '11) | |||
[[Adrian C. Weimer]], Instructional Assistant Professor of Religion, University of Mississippi | |||
:“Divine Consolations: A Cultural History of Affliction” | |||
:(One month, tbd) | |||
[[Joshua Westgard]], Haslam Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Marco Institute, University of Tennessee | |||
:“Bede’s History and its Readers in the Age of Print” | |||
:(One month, July '10) | |||
[[Rachel Willie]], Teaching Associate in English, University of York | |||
:“Staging Revolution: Drama, Reinvention, and Historical Interpretation” | |||
:(Two months, January – March '11) | |||
[[David Worrall]], Professor of English, Nottingham Trent University | |||
:“Performing Britannia” | |||
:(One month, December '10 – January '11) | |||
==2009–2010 short-term fellows== | |||
[[Panagiota Batsaki]], Fellow in English, St. John’s College, Cambridge | |||
:“Narratives of Experience: Empiricism, Induction, and the Eighteenth-Century Novel” | |||
[[Julie Biggs]], Senior Paper Conservator, Library of Congress | |||
:“The Conservation of Iron-Gall Ink on Paper” | |||
[[Erika Boeckeler]], Assistant Professor of English, Kenyon College | |||
:“The Dramatization of the Alphabet in the Renaissance” | |||
[[Joyce Boro]], Associate Professor of English, Université de Montréal | |||
:A Critical Edition and Study of the Reception of Margaret Tyler’s Mirrour of Princely Deeds and Knighthood | |||
[[Tom Cartelli]], Professor of English and Film Studies, Muhlenberg College | |||
:“Producing Disorder: The Construction of Misrule in Early Modern England, New England, and Ireland: 1570–1640” | |||
[[Raz Chen-Morris]], Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Studies, Bar Ilan University | |||
:“The Quality of Nothing and the Visual Economy of Early Modern Science” | |||
[[Christopher Crosbie]], Assistant Professor of English, North Carolina State University | |||
:“Philosophies of Retribution: Noumena, Phenomena, And Early Modern Revenge Tragedy” | |||
[[Eamon Darcy]], Ph.D. candidate, Trinity College, Dublin (degree by residency) | |||
:“The 1641 Depositions and Contemporary Print Culture” | |||
[[Andrew Escobedo]], Associate Professor of English, Ohio University (declined) | |||
:“Renaissance Allegories of the Will” | |||
[[Lori Anne Ferrell]], Professor of Early Modern History and Literature, Claremont Graduate University | |||
:“The St. Paul’s Sermons of John Donne, 1623–25” | |||
[[Andrew Foster]], Visiting Fellow, University of Southampton | |||
:“Dioceses of England & Wales” | |||
[[Susan Frye]], Professor of English, University of Wyoming | |||
:“The Iconography of Mary Queen of Scots” | |||
[[David George]], Professor of English, Urbana College | |||
:"A New Variorum Coriolanus" | |||
[[Stuart Gillespie]], Reader in English Literature, University of Glasgow | |||
:“The Classics in Translation, Publication and Performance, 1558–1660” | |||
[[Kathryn Gucer]], Lecturer in English, Northwestern University | |||
:“Revolution Across” | |||
[[Andrew Hadfield]], Professor of English, University of Sussex | |||
:"A Biography of Edmund Spenser" | |||
[[Robert Hornback]], Associate Professor of English and Theater, Oglethorpe University | |||
:“Early Blackface Fools and their Legacy” | |||
[[Herbert A. Johnson]], Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, University of South Carolina | |||
:“Sir Edward Coke and the Divergence of English and American Constitutionalism” | |||
[[Janet Johnson]], Scholar-in-Residence, Newberry Library | |||
:“Shakespeare’s Romeo and Dante’s Giulietta: The Story of a Myth in Music” | |||
[[Eric Johnson-DeBaufre]], Ph.D. candidate, Boston University (degree by residency) | |||
:“The Letters of Nathaniel Bacon and the Memorialization of Kett’s Rebellion” | |||
[[John King]], Humanities Distinguished Professor of English and Religious Studies, The Ohio State University | |||
:“The Reformation of the Book, 1450–1650” | |||
[[Chris Kyle]], Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University | |||
:“The Oxford Francis Bacon, Vol. VII” | |||
[[Dalia Leonardo]], Assistant Professor/Metadata Librarian, Mina Rees Library, CUNY | |||
:“‘Behold the air filled with prayers and processions’: The Catholic League in Paris, 1589–1593” | |||
[[Jenny Mann]], Assistant Professor of English, Cornell University | |||
:“Outlaw Rhetoric: Vernacular Eloquence in Early Modern England” | |||
[[Timothy McCall]], Assistant Professor of Art History, Villanova University | |||
:“Art, Gender, and Chivalric Masculinity in Early Renaissance Italy” | |||
[[Russ McDonald]], Professor of English Literature, Goldsmith’s College, University of London | |||
:“Elizabethan Poetics and the Culture of Symmetry” | |||
[[Mary Pollard Murray]], Assistant Professor of English, Columbia University | |||
:“The Poet and the Prison from Chaucer to Milton” | |||
[[Joseph Navitsky]], Assistant Professor of English, University of Southern Mississippi | |||
:“Religious Conflict and the Rearticulation of Early Modern Satire” | |||
[[Louise Noble]], Lecturer in English, University of New England (Australia) | |||
:"‘Floating Upwards’: The Rhetoric and Practice of Water Management in Early Modern England" | |||
[[Marcy Norton]], Associate Professor of History, George Washington University | |||
:“The Limits of Anthropocentrism: People and Animals in the Early Modern World” | |||
[[Elizabeth Pallitto]], Independent Scholar | |||
:“Courtier, Courtesan, Heretic, Saint: Public Image and Private Polemics of Four Writers in Counter-Reformation Italy” | |||
[[Varsha Panjwani]], Ph.D. candidate, University of York (degree by residency) | |||
:“Performing Renaissance Drama: Collaboration versus Shakespeare” | |||
[[Gerard Passannante]], Assistant Professor of English, University of Maryland | |||
:“Gabriel Harvey and the Deep Analogy” | |||
[[Douglas Pfeiffer]], Assistant Professor of English, Stony Brook University, SUNY | |||
:“Renaissance Literary Biography and the Making of Authorial Intent” | |||
[[Beth Quitslund]], Associate Professor of English, Ohio University | |||
:"The Whole Booke of Psalmes: A Critical Edition" | |||
[[Shankar Raman]], Associate Professor of English, MIT | |||
:“A World of Figures” | |||
[[Nigel Ramsay]], Senior Research Fellow, History, University College London | |||
:“The Heraldic Manuscripts in the Folger Shakespeare Library and their Scribes” | |||
[[Emma Rhatigan]], Lecturer in Renaissance Literature, Queen’s University Belfast | |||
:“John Donne’s Sermons Preached at the Inns of Court: A Critical Edition” | |||
[[Katherine Rowe]], Professor of English, Bryn Mawr | |||
:“Robert Hamilton Ball Papers: Exhibition and Theory” | |||
[[Regina Schwartz]], Professor of English, Northwestern University | |||
:“Idolatry in Early Modern England” | |||
[[Sarah K. Scott]], Assistant Professor of English, Mount St. Mary’s University | |||
:“Performance Index: New Variorum Edition of Julius Caesar” | |||
[[Garrett Sullivan]], Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University | |||
:“Sleep and the Human in the Renaissance” | |||
[[Stephen Taylor]], Professor of Early Modern History, University of Reading | |||
:“Newsletters, Newspapers, and News Networks: English Perception of Europe in the Late Seventeenth Century” | |||
[[Wendy Thompson]], Independent Scholar | |||
:“The Mysteries of Fancesco Marcolini’s Le Sorti” | |||
[[Daniel Vitkus]], Associate Professor of English, Florida State University | |||
:“Anglo-Islamic Exchange, English Renaissance Texts, and the Origins of Modernity” | |||
[[Anthony James West]], Independent Scholar | |||
:“First Folio Project” | |||
[[Lina Wilder]], Assistant Professor of English, Connecticut College | |||
:“Shakespeare’s Memory Theater” | |||
[[Paul Yachnin]], Tomlinson Professor of Shakespeare Studies, McGill University | |||
:“Shakespearean Publicity” | |||
==2008–2009 short-term fellows== | |||
[[Geoff Baker]], Temporary Lecturer in Early Modern History, Keele University | |||
:“Catholic Reading Practices and Cultural Politics in Early Modern England, c. 1580–1715” | |||
[[Mark Bayer]], Assistant Professor of English, American University of Beirut | |||
:“Nineteenth-Century American Editions of Shakespeare” | |||
[[Peter Beal]], Senior Research Fellow, Institute of English Studies, University of London | |||
:“Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts, 1450–1700” | |||
[[Elizabeth Bearden]], Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Maryland | |||
:“Repainting Romance: Ekphrasis and Otherness in Renaissance Imitation of Greek Romance” | |||
[[Ilona Bell]], Professor of English, Williams College | |||
:“An Edition of Mary Wroth’s Pamphilia to Amphilanthus” | |||
[[Anston Bosman]], Associate Professor of English, Amherst College | |||
:“The Northern Way: Renaissance England in North Sea Culture” | |||
[[Ruth Connolly]], Research Associate, School of English, Newcastle University | |||
:“The Complete Poetry of Robert Herrick” | |||
[[Alice Dailey]], Assistant Professor of English, Villanova University | |||
:“From Acts to Monuments: Martyrology and the English Reformation” | |||
[[Holly Dugan]], Assistant Professor of English, The George Washington University | |||
:“The Ephemeral History of Perfume: Scent and Sense in Early Modern England” | |||
[[Gabriel Egan]], Reader in Shakespeare Studies, Loughborough University | |||
:“Reading Shakespeare’s Mind: Twentieth-Century Editorial Theory and Practice” | |||
[[Anthony Ellis]], Assistant Professor of English, Western Michigan University | |||
:“‘Il Shax’: Literary Translations, Theatrical Adaptations of Shakespeare in Italy” | |||
[[Catherine Field]], Assistant Professor of English, San Diego State University | |||
:“‘Many Hands’: Early Modern Englishwomen’s Recipes and the Writing of Food, Politics, and the Self” | |||
[[Valerie Forman]], Assistant Professor of English, University of Colorado, Boulder | |||
:“Developing New Worlds: Property, Freedom, and the Economics of Representation in Early Modern England” | |||
[[Thomas Freeman]], Research Officer, John Foxe Project, University of Sheffield | |||
:“A Comparative Analysis of the Protestant Martyrologies” | |||
[[David Greer]], Emeritus Professor of Music, Durham University | |||
:“An Edition of Musica Transalpina” | |||
[[Joseph J. Gwara]], Associate Professor of Spanish, United States Naval Academy | |||
:“A Gallery of Grotesques: Woodcut Initials in Sixteenth-Century English Books” | |||
[[F. Elizabeth Hart]], Associate Professor of English, University of Connecticut, Storrs | |||
:“Reading, Consciousness, and Renaissance Romance” | |||
[[Grace Ioppolo]], Reader in English Literature, University of Reading | |||
:“Dulwich College: The First Early Modern Theater History Library” | |||
[[Miriam Jacobson]], Assistant Professor of English, Wake Forest University | |||
:“Antiquity and the East in Early Modern English Poetry” | |||
[[Carol Ann Johnston]], Associate Professor of English, Dickinson College | |||
:“‘Heavenly Perspective’: Thomas Traherne and Seventeenth-Century Visual Traditions” | |||
[[Lisa Kasmer]], Assistant Professor of English, Clark University | |||
:“Regendering History: Gender and Genres of History, 1760–1840” | |||
[[Krista Kesselring]], Associate Professor of History, Dalhousie University | |||
:“Criminal Forfeitures in English Law, c. 1170–1870” | |||
[[Gerard Kilroy]], Independent Scholar, Bath, England | |||
:“Controlling the Margins: A Bibliographic Study of the Works of Sir John Harington (1560–1612)” | |||
[[Maria Koundoura]], Associate Professor of Literature, Emerson College | |||
:“Desire Lines: Metaphors of the Global City” | |||
[[Barbara Kreps]], Associate Professor of English, Emerita, University of Pisa | |||
:“Legal Theory, Legal Practice, and Early Modern Theater” | |||
[[Angela Locatelli]], Professor of English, University of Bergamo | |||
:“Rhetoric as an Interface Between Different Epistemologies in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England” | |||
[[Gail Marshall]], Reader in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Oxford Brookes University | |||
:“Ellen Terry and Shakespeare” | |||
[[Jeffrey Masten]], Associate Professor of English and Gender Studies, Northwestern University | |||
:“Spelling Shakespeare and Other Essays in Queer Philology” | |||
[[Kirk Melnikoff]], Assistant Professor of English, University of North Carolina, Charlotte | |||
:“The Literary and Political Ventures of Nicholas Ling” | |||
[[Nick Moschovakis]], Independent Scholar, Washington, DC | |||
:“Shakespeare, Vergilian?: Allusion and Early Ironic Readings of Aeneid 6” | |||
[[Paul Nelles]], Associate Professor of History, Carleton University | |||
:“Christoph Froschauer and Conrad Gesner: Printing in Zurich Between the Reformation and the Renaissance” | |||
[[Meredith Neuman]], Assistant Professor of Early American Literature, Clark University | |||
:“Letter and Spirit: Theories of the Sermon in Puritan New England” | |||
[[Aysha Pollnitz]], Research Fellow in History, Trinity College, Cambridge | |||
:“The Theory and Practice of Consilium in the Reign of Mary I” | |||
[[Jordi Sanchez-Marti]], Assistant Professor of English, University of Alicante | |||
:“Palmerin d’Oliva: An Edition of the English Translation” | |||
[[Marc Schachter]], Assistant Professor of French, Duke University | |||
:“Desiring Philology and the History of Sexuality” | |||
[[Richard Schoch]], Professor of the History of Culture, Queen Mary, University of London | |||
:“Henry Irving and Shakespeare” | |||
[[Michael Steppat]], Professor of English Literature, University of Bayreuth | |||
:“New Variorum Edition of The Merry Wives of Windsor” | |||
[[Michael Suarez]], SJ, Associate Professor of English, Fordham University | |||
:“Plate Subscription and the Patronage of Engravings for Learned Books in England from John Ogilby to the Oxford University Press” | |||
[[Kathy Temple]], Associate Professor of English, Georgetown University | |||
:“Lady Law Lies Alone: Women, Law, and Culture in the Anglo-American Eighteenth Century” | |||
[[David Trim]], Visiting Professor of History, Pacific Union College | |||
:“The Puritan Ideology of Holy War in Continental Context, c. 1560–1640” | |||
[[Michael Witmore]], Associate Professor of English, Carnegie Mellon University | |||
:“Wisdom and the Book of Experience” | |||
[[James Woolley]], Smith Professor of English, Lafayette College | |||
:“The Canon and Chronology of Swift’s Poems” | |||
[[Category: Fellowships| ]] | |||
[[Category: Folger Institute]] | |||
[[Category: Short-term| ]] |
Latest revision as of 07:47, 19 May 2015
Folger Institute short-term fellows from previous years. See current Folger Institute short-term fellows for this year's fellows.
2014–2015 short-term fellows
Harriet Archer, English, Newcastle University
- "Reading Poetic Authority in 1570s England: Manuscript Marginalia to English Printed Poetry in the Folger Collection"
Tamara Atkin, English, Queen Mary University of London
- "Play and Book: Drama‚ Reading‚ and the Invention of the Literary in Tudor England"
Anna Bertolet, English, Auburn University
- "Written in Thread on Contested Ground: Gender and Needlework in Early Modern England"
Joshua Calhoun, English, University of Wisconsin-Madison
- "Revising the Past: Ink Blots‚ Erasure‚ and Ecologies of Inscription in Renaissance England"
Clare Carroll, Comparative Literature, Queen’s College, CUNY
- "The Uses of Spenser’s A View of the Present State of Ireland"
Antonio Castore, Humanities, University of Turin
- "Pericles‚ Prince of Tyre: A New Translation and Critical Edition in Italian"
Leah Chang, French, The George Washington University
- "Two Queens: Maternity and the Embodiment of Sovereignty in Early Modern France and England"
Katharine Cleland, English, Virginia Tech University
- "Fictions of Clandestine Marriage in Early Modern England"
Rita Costa-Gomes, History, Towson University
- "A Cartographer’s Tale: Boazio's 1588 View of Santiago"
Lezlie Cross, Drama, University of Washington
- "The Nineteenth-Century Shakespeare Dramaturg: William Winter and Horace Howard Furness"
Cesare Cuttica, English Studies, Paris University
- "Fighting the Monstrous ‘Many-Headed Multitude’: Anti-Democracy in Early Modern England ca. 1580-1640"
Surekha Davies, History, Western Connecticut State University
- "Mapping the Peoples of the New World: Ethnography‚ Imagery, and Knowledge in Renaissance Europe"
Vivian Davis, English, University of Arkansas
- "Genres of the Moment: David Garrick Between Tragedy and Comedy"
Eoin Devlin, History, University of Cambridge
- "British Responses to the Baroque‚ c.1603–c.1797"
Derek Dunne, English, Queen’s University, Belfast
- "Vindictive Justice‚ Participatory Revenge"
Rebecca Emmett, History, St. John’s College, Oxford
- "Publishing Networks in Elizabethan London: The Case of Thomas Man"
Alan Galey, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
- "Visualizing Variation in Shakespeare and Early Modern Books"
David Gehring, Theology and Religion, Durham University
- "Anglo-German Translations and Travel‚ 1558–1603"
Musa Gurnis, English, Washington University
- "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London"
Vanessa Harding, History‚ Classics & Archaeology, Birbeck, University of London
- "Richard Smyth (1590–1675) and His Books"
Megan Heffernan, English, DePaul University
- "Each Part Together: Form‚ Collections‚ and the Poetic Imagination in Tottel’s England"
Brett Hirsch, English and Cultural Studies, The University of Western Australia
- "Reproducing Renaissance Drama‚ 1744–2014"
Katherine Hunt, Literature‚ Drama‚ and Creative Writing, University of East Anglia
- "Arts of Variation: Permutational Practices and the Shape of Change in Seventeenth-Century English Writing"
Bruce Janacek, History, North Central College
- "Elias Ashmole: A Study in Virtuosity"
Claire Jowitt, English, University of Southampton
- "Critical Edition of Hakluyt’s The Principal Navigations: Volume XIV"
Darcy Kern, History, McDaniel College
- "Tyranny in Translation: The Reception of Paolo Sarpi in Renaissance England"
David Lawrence, History, Trent University
- "England’s Merchant Soldiers: Civic Militarism and Military Performance in the Early Stuart Period"
Kat Lecky, English, Arkansas State University
- "The Laureate Poetics of Pocket Maps in Renaissance Britain"
Catherine Loomis, English, University of New Orleans
- "The John Jack Promptbook"
Fabio Luppi, Education Science, Roma Tre University
- "New Edition and First Italian Translation of the Jacobean Play by John Marston and Others: The Insatiate Countess"
Jack Lynch, English, Rutgers University
- "The Shakespeare Phantom: The Lives of William Henry Ireland"
Kate Narveson, English, Luther College
- "Resting Assured: Devotional Reading and the Creation of Emotion"
Sandrine Parageau, English Studies, University of Paris, West, Nanterre Nanterre La Défense
- "Spreading the Word of a Woman Kabbalist: A Translation of Anne Conway’s The Principles of the Most Ancient and Modern Philosophy (1690/1692)"
Jared Richman, English, Colorado College
- "(In)audible Bodies and (In)visible Voices: Elocution and Disability in the Long Eighteenth Century"
Leslie Ritchie, English, Queen’s University
- "David Garrick and the Mediation of Celebrity"
Jenny Sager, English, The University of Nottingham
- "The Friar Bacon Plays: Robert Greene’s Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay and John of Bordeaux"
Anita Sherman, English, American University
- '"The Skeptical Imagination of Margaret Cavendish"
Monika Smialkowska, Humanities, Northumbria University
- "Shakespeare 1916: Local and Global Perspectives"
Courtney Smith, English, Wesleyan University
- "Empiricist Devotions: Scrutinizing Nature in Early Eighteenth-Century England"
Claire Sponsler, English, The University of Iowa
- "Reading the Beauchamp Pageant"
Tatiana String, Art, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- "Masculinity and the Male Body in Renaissance Art"
Mark Vareschi, English, University of Wisconsin-Madison
- "Everywhere and Nowhere: The Anonymous Text‚ 1660–1790"
Julianne Werlin, English, The University of Southern California
- "Informers and Information in Francis Bacon’s Thought"
John West, English, University of Exeter
- "Literature and the Succession of Charles II‚ 1649–1661"
Jay Zysk, English, University of South Florida
- "Shadow and Substance: Reading the Eucharist in Medieval and Early Modern English Drama"
2013–2014 short–term fellows
Katherine Acheson, English, University of Waterloo
- “Inscriptions: Writing in Early Modern English Bibles”
Ronda Arab, English, Simon Fraser University
- “The Gentleman Apprentice on the Early Modern London Stage”
Guyda Armstrong, Italian Studies, University of Manchester
- “Boccaccio in English, 1494–1620”
Kevin Bourque, Writing in the Disciplines, Southwestern University
- “Seriality, Singularity, and Celebrity: Pictures in Motion from 1680–1810”
Ian Campbell, Center for Neo-Latin Studies, University College Cork
- “Protestant Natural Law and Irish Natural Slaves”
Urvashi Chakravarty, English, University of Hawaii at Manoa
- “Serving Like a Free Man: Labor, Liberty, and Consent in Early Modern England”
Raz Chen-Morris, History of Science, Bar Ilan University
- “Vision Contested”
David Coast, History, Durham University
- “Rumour and Common Fame in Early Stuart Manuscript Miscellanies”
Matthew Day, English, Newman University
- “Reading the Nation’s Voyages – the Literature of Travel and the Nature of English Nationalism”
Eric Dursteler, History, Brigham Young University (SCSC/Folger Fellow)
- “Around the Mediterranean Table: Foodways and Identity in the Early Modern Era”
Amy Froide, History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
- “Women’s Financial Literacy in Early Modern England”
Nathan Garvey, English, University of Queensland
- “Jane Garland/Lowndes: Printer to the Drury Lane Theatre (fl. 1777–1824)”
David George, English, Urbana University
- “A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare’s Coriolanus”
Katherine Gillen, English, Texas A&M University, San Antonio
- “Chaste Value: Economic Crises, Sexual Anxiety, and Construction of Identity in Early Modern Drama”
Ken Gouwens, History, University of Connecticut
- “Defining Human Exceptionalism”
John Gouws, English, North-West University
- “Clarendon Edition of the Works of Fulke Greville”
David Greer, Music, Durham University
- “An Edition of Manuscript Music in Printed Sources”
Tobias Gregory, English, The Catholic University of America
- “Milton’s Strenuous Liberty”
Huw Griffiths, English, University of Sydney
- “Love, Desire, and Friendship Between Men in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Adaptations of Shakespeare”
William Hauptman, Independent Scholar, Lausanne, Switzerland
- “Samuel Hieronymus Grimm’s Shakespeare Illustration in the Folger”
Richard Hoyle, History, University of Reading
- “Popular Royalism in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century”
Miriam Jacobson, English, University of Georgia
- “Renaissance Undead: Resurrecting the Past in Early Modern England”
Christopher Johnson, English, University of California, Los Angeles
- “Squaring the Circle: Representing Self and World in The Anatomy of Melancholy”
Ben Labreche, English, University of Mary Washington
- “Liberty Agonistes: Milton and Modern Freedom”
Katherine Larson, English, University of Toronto
- “The Singing Body in Early Modern England”
Dmitri Levitin, History, Trinity College, Cambridge
- “The Historicization of Religion and Theology, c. 1580–1720”
Christopher Matusiak, English, Ithaca College
- “A Critical Edition of Robert Greene’s Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay”
Agnes Matuska, English, University of Szeged
- “Early Modern Version of the Theatrum Mundi, and our Contemporary Perspectives”
Valerie McGowan-Doyle, History, Lorain County Community College
- “Violence Against Women in Sixteenth-Century Ireland”
Stephanie Morley, English, Saint Mary’s University
- “Lady Margaret Beaufort: The Imitation of Christ, Book IV, The Mirror of Gold to the Sinful Soul – a Critical Edition”
Louise Noble, School of Arts, University of New England (Australia)
- “The Changing Waterscape in Early Modern Rural England”
Sarah Noonan, English, Lindenwood University
- “The Book in Parts: Selective Reading Practices in Late Medieval England”
Shormishtha Panja, English, University of Delhi
- “Shakespeare, Boydell and Bengal”
Vimala Pasupathi, Theatre, Hofstra University
- “The Militia Theatre, 1560–1660: Playing the Soldier in English Drama and British History”
Teresa Prudente, Humanities, University of Turin
- “The Two Noble Kinsmen: a New Translation and Critical Edition in Italian”
Maria Anne Purciello, Music History, University of Delaware
- “Artistry, Rhetoric and … Laughter? Rethinking the ‘Comic’ in 17th-Century Opera”
Mark Rankin, English, James Madison University (RSA/Folger Fellow)
- “William Tyndale’s Practice of Prelates (1530) and the Nature of Reading in Renaissance England”
Lucy Razzall, English, Emmanuel College, Cambridge
- “Printed Repositories in Early Modern England”
Letha Clair Robertson, Art History, University of Texas, Tyler
- “Marketing the Theatrical Celebrity: Thomas Hicks’s Portraits of Edwin Booth”
Benedict Robinson, English, Stony Brook University
- “Feeling Words: An Early Modern Philology of the Affections”
Claire Sponsler, English, University of Iowa
- “Reading the Beauchamp Pageant”
Andrew Strycharski, English, Florida International University
- “Philip Sidney, Community, and the Reformation’s Passionate Ethics”
Edward (Mac) Test, English, Boise State University
- “Cochineal: From Myth to Market”
Clotilde Thouret, Comparative Literature, University of Paris-Sorbonne
- “Defending the Theater, from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment: Knowledge, Effects and Uses of a Controversial Art”
Lucy Underwood, Theology, Durham University
- “‘Out of a heretical nation’: English Catholic Representations of Protestant England and their Reception”
Denise Walen, Theatre, Vassar College
- “Dethroning Margaret”
Elizabeth Williamson, Independent Scholar, London
- “Henry Unton and the Afterlives of Letters: Copies, Counterfeits, and the Construction of History”
Carl Wise, Hispanic Studies, College of Charleston
- “Doctrines on Display: Baroque Theologies in the Theater of Antonio Mira de Amescua”
David Worrall, English, Nottingham Trent University
- “Sarah Siddons and Edmund Kean’s Drury Lane Audiences”
2012–2013 short-term fellows
Marco Barducci, Political Thought, University of Florence
- "Hugo Grotius and the Reception of De imperio summarum potestatum circa sacra in the English Revolution, 1640–1660"
Clara Calvo, English, University of Murcia
- "Shakespeare and the Cultures of Commemoration"
Ian Campbell, History, Trinity College Dublin
- "Protestant Natural Law and Irish Natural Slaves"
Brinda Charry, English, Keene State College
- "‘Imperfect Men:’ Eunuchs, The East, and Early Modern English Drama"
Matthew Davies, IHR, University of London
- "London 1300–1550"
Chad Van Dixhoorn, History, Reformed Theological Seminary
- "The Westminster Assembly and the Pulpit"
Eric Dursteler, History, Brigham Young University
- "Around the Mediterranean Table: Foodways and Identity in the Early Modern Era"
J. Caitlin Finlayson, English, University Michigan-Dearborn
- "Stephen Harrison’s The Arches of Triumph: James I’s London Royal Entry and the Architectural Representation of Majesty"
John Garrison, English, Carroll University
- "Enriching Friendship"
Gail McMurray Gibson, English, Davidson College
- "Sir Kenelm Digby, Cultures of Recusancy, and The Digby Plays"
Colette Gordon, English, University of Cape Town
- "Shakespeare’s Play of Credit"
Lianne Habinek, Literature, Bard College
- "Such Wondrous Science: Metaphor and the Birth of Neuroscience in Early Modern England"
Susan Harlan, English, Wake Forest University
- "Objects of War: Military Dress, Memory, and the Making of the Early Modern English Subject"
Johanna Harris, English, University of Exeter
- "The Collected Works of Thomas Traherne Volume III"
Christopher Highley, English, Ohio State University
- "The Blackfriars Neighborhood: God’s House and Playhouse"
Wendy Hyman, English, Oberlin College
- "Skeptical Seductions: Carpe Diem Poetry and the Eroticism of Doubt"
Stacey Jocoy, Musicology, Texas Tech University
- "John Playford and the Evolution of The Introduction to the Skill of Musick"
Erin Kelly, English, University of Victoria
- "Performing Religious Conversion in Early Modern England"
- Sixteenth-Century Studies/Folger Fellow
Gerard Kilroy, English, University College London
- "Edmund Campion and William Shakespeare: an Uncertain Connection"
Natasha Korda, English, Wesleyan University
- "Sister Arts: Theater and Visual Culture in Early Modern England"
Douglas Lanier, English, University of New Hampshire
- "America’s Shakespeare Commemorated: 1864, 1916, 1964"
John Lavagnino, English, King’s College London
- "The Death and Rebirth of Early Modern Drama"
Yu Liu, English, Niagara County Community College
- "Harmonious Disagreement: Matteo Ricci and his Closest Chinese Friends"
Brian Lockey, English, St. John’s University
- "The Pope’s Scholars: Catholics, Royalists, and Cosmopolitans Writing at the Margins of Early Modern England"
Cecilia Maier-Kapoor, Modern Languages and Literatures, Pace University
- "Platonic Love Reconsidered: The Role of Medicine in Francesco Cattani da Diacceto’s ‘I tre libre d’amore’ (1561)"
Howard Marchitello, English, Rutgers University-Camden
- "The Diary Notebooks of Reverend John Ward: Early Modern ‘Science in Action’"
Rupali Mishra, History, Auburn University
- "A business of state: the meanings of the East India Company and English State in London and Asia in the 17th Century"
Paul Musselwhite, History, University of Glasgow
- "Conceiving the Plantation Town: Civic Structures in English Atlantic Debate"
- American Historical Association/Folger Fellow
Marcy North, English, Pennsylvania State University
- "Scribal Labor and the Exercise of Taste in Post-Print Manuscript Culture"
Kara Northway, English, Kansas State University
- "Actors’ Letters"
Monique O’Connell, History, Wake Forest University
- "Constructing Narratives, Building Empire: Renaissance Republicanism and Venetian Expansion"
Elizabeth Patton, Humanities, Johns Hopkins University
- "Reading the Rosary and Marking its Absence: Readers’ Marks and the Reformation History of the “beads” and the Little Office of the Virgin"
Chiara Petrolini, Renaissance Studies, Balzan Foundation
- "Between Two Worlds: a Critical edition of A True Historicall Conversion of Sir Tobie Matthew"
Nicholas Popper, History, College of William and Mary
- "Edmund Tilney’s Topographical Descriptions and Elizabethan Political Culture"
Todd Reeser, French and Italian, University of Pittsburgh
- "Setting Plato Straight: Translating Ancient Sexuality in the Renaissance"
Colleen Rosenfeld, English, Pomona College
- "Indecorous Thinking: Poetic Figures and the Production of Knowledge in Early Modern England"
Julia Schleck, English, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
- "The Genres of Early Capitalism"
Deneen Senasi, English, Mercer University
- "Companionate Reading, Coincidental Inscription, and the Associated Name: George Eliot, George Henry Lewes, and the Works of Shakespeare"
Daniel Smith, English, University of Reading
- "Early Modern Manuscripts at the Folger: The Conways, John Donne, and Bess of Hardwick"
Scott Sowerby, History, Northwestern University
- "Acquisitive Cosmopolitanism and the Early British Empire, 1660–1720"
Elizabeth Spiller, English, Florida State University
- "The Sense of Matter: Science, Matter Theory, and Literary Creations in the Renaissance"
Felicity Stout, Humanities, Nottingham Trent University
- "Richard Hakluyt’s The Principal Navigations: a New Critical Edition of V.4, the Russian Material"
Kristina Straub, English, Carnegie Mellon University
- "Shakespearean Performance and the Sexual Imaginary of 18th-Century London Theatre"
Rivka Swenson, English, Virginia Commonwealth University
- "Before Unionism: Parts, Wholes, and Aesthetic Politics, 1603–1707"
Patrick Tuite, Drama, Catholic University of America
- "Dramaturgy in the Age of Monarch
Lucy Underwood, History, Independent Scholar
- "Imagining Englands: Confessionalization and National Identity after the English Reformation"
Susan Wabuda, History, Fordham University
- "Cranmer’s Women"
2011–2012 short-term fellows
Sharon Achinstein, Reader in English Renaissance Literature, University of Oxford
- “The Life and Death of the Sonnet in the Seventeenth Century”
- (One month, 19 July - 15 August '11)
Carlo Bajetta, Chair of English, Università della Valle d’Aosta
- “‘Knowledge of all tongues’: The Foreign Letters of Elizabeth I”
- (Three months, June – August '12)
Alex Barber, Lecturer of Early Modern History, University of Durham
- “John Dyer and Scribal News”
- (One month, September ’11)
Mark Bland, Senior Lecturer, De Montfort University
- “The Poems of Ben Jonson”
- (Two months, 25 July – 25 September ’11)
Andrew Boyle, Lecturer in History, Brasenose College, Oxford
- “Samuel Daniel’s Collection of the History of England”
- (Three months, April – June ’12)
Alan Bryson, Research Associate and Tutor of English, Sheffield University
- “Lordship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI”
- (Two months, March – May ’12)
Christopher Burlinson, Fellow and College Lecturer in English, Jesus College Cambridge
- “The Poems of Richard Corbett: A Social Edition”
- (One month, 16 January - 17 February '12)
Marie-Louise Coolahan, Lecturer in English, National University of Ireland, Galway
- “Gender and the Construction of Authorship in the Early Modern Period”
- (One month, March '12)
Krystyna Kujawinska Courtney, Professor, Vice Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Łódź
- “Helena Modjeska’s Career in the USA”
- (Two months, August - September '11)
Kevin Curran, Assistant Professor of English, University of North Texas
- “The Revels Plays Edition of Samuel Daniel’s Tragedy of Philotas”
- (One month, June ’12)
Elizabeth Evenden, Lecturer in Book History, Brunel University
- “Early Modern Propaganda and Printing in England and Portugal”
- (Two months, 16 July – 16 September ’11)
Jill R. Fehleison, Associate Professor of History, Quinnipiac University
- “Hearsay or Truth? Catholic/Protestant Polemics and the Maintenance of Religious Difference”
- (One month, June ’12)
Kenneth Fincham, Professor of History, University of Kent
- “Episcopacy and the Church of England, 1630-1670”
- (Two months, tbd)
Frances Gage, Assistant Professor of Renaissance and Baroque Art, SUNY Buffalo
- “Visual Cures: Painting as Medicine in Early Modern Italy”
- (Two months, March – April ’12)
Gail McMurray Gibson, Professor of English and Humanities, Davidson College
- “Cox Macro, The Macro Plays, and the Ghosts of an East Anglian Past”
- (One month, November ’11)
Paul Goring, Professor of English, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- “Charles Macklin and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Culture”
- (Two months, October – November ’11)
Joel Halcomb, Teaching Assistant in History, University of St. Andrews
- “Colonel Robert Bennett: Puritan Political Pragmatism and Religious Radicalism in the English Revolution”
- (Three months, tbd)
Margaret Hannay, Professor of English, Siena College
- “Appropriating David in the Renaissance”
- (One month, 16 March – 15 April ’12)
Maria Hayward, Reader in Early Modern History, University of Southampton
- “Courting Gloriana: Gift Giving as a Means of Social Advancement at the Court of Elizabeth I”
- (One month, February ’12)
Robert Hornback, Associate Professor of English, Oglethorpe University
- “Early Blackface Fools and Transnational Proto-Racism”
- (Three months, December '11, May-June '12)
Alexa Huang, Associate Professor of English, George Washington University/Research Affiliate in Literature, MIT
- “Shakespeare and East Asia”
- (Three months, January – March ’12)
Michael Rodman Jones, Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge
- “Protestant Medievalism”
- (One month, March – April ’12)
Andras Kisery, Assistant Professor of English, City College of New York, CUNY
- “Politicians in Show: Early Jacobean Drama and the Socialization of Political Competence”
- (Three months, February – April ’12)
Laura L. Knoppers, Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University
- “Literature, Luxury, and Nationhood in Milton’s England”
- (One month, February ’12)
Julian Lamb, Assistant Professor of English, Chinese University of Hong Kong
- “Early Modern Orthography, Language Reform, and Wittgenstein”
- (Three months, June – August ’11)
Carole Levin, Willa Cather Professor of History, University of Nebraska
- “Fantasies and Representations of the Sixteenth-Century Dead in the Stuart England Political World Imaginary”
- (Two months, December ’11 – January ’12)
Lia Markey, Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Penn Humanities Forum, University of Pennsylvania
- “Renaissance Invention, Collaboration and Process in Stradano’s Nova Reperte”
- (One month, March '12)
Jeanne McCarthy, Assistant Professor of English, Oglethorpe University
- “Schooling the Drama: The Children’s Tradition and the Transformation of Renaissance English Theater”
- (Three months, December '11, May-June '12)
Kevin McGinley, Lecturer in Scottish Cultural Studies, University of the Highland and Islands
- “Scotland on the Late Eighteenth-Century American Stage”
- (Three months, July – September ’11)
Hiram Morgan, Professor of History, University College, Cork
- “Bacon and Ireland: An Annotated Reader”
- (Six weeks, tbd)
Simon P. Newman, Sir Denis Brogan Professor of American History, University of Glasgow
- “Race and Bound Labour in the British Atlantic World”
- (Three months, July – September ’11)
Warren Oakley, Independent Scholar, UK
- “Tracing the Theatrical Life of Robert Harris”
- (Two months, March – April ’12)
Viorel Panaite, Professor of Islamic-Ottoman History, University of Bucharest
- “Western Navigation, Consuls and Piracy in the Ottoman Mediterranean (16th-17th centuries)”
- (Three months, December ’11 – February ’12)
Veronika Schandl, Associate Professor of English Literature, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Hungary
- “Elizabethan and Jacobean Theaters: The Stage and its Social Context”
- (Three months, February – May ’12)
Hilda Smith, Professor of History, University of Cincinnati
- “Images of Tradeswomen in Early Modern Literature and Art”
- (Three months, March – May ’12)
Tracey Sowerby, Departmental Lecturer in Early Modern History, St. Hilda’s College Oxford
- “Tudor Diplomatic Culture”
- (One month, 20 July - 19 August '11)
Alan Stewart, Professor of English, Columbia University
- “French Shakespeare”
- (Three months, September - November '11)
Mihoko Suzuki, Professor of English, University of Miami
- “Antigone’s Example: Gender, History, and the Politics of Civil War in Early Modern England and France”
- (One month, October ’11)
Carlo Taviani, Ricercatore, Istituto Storico Italo Germanico di Trento
- “Privatized States: European Companies and their Colonies from the Bank of San Giorgio to the English East India Company”
- (Three months, January – March ’12)
Valerie Wayne, Professor of English, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa
- “Introduction to Arden 3 Cymbeline”
- (Two months, April – May ’12)
Bronwen Wilson, Associate Professor of Art History, University of British Columbia
- “Journeys to Constantinople: Inscription, the Horizon, and Duration in Early Modern Travel Imagery”
- (Two months, September '11, June '12)
Laura Lehua Yim, Assistant Professor of English, San Francisco State University
- “Fluid Propriety: Water and Authority in Spenser and Shakespeare”
- (Three months, August - October)
2010–2011 short-term fellows
Charles Beem, Associate Professor of History, University of North Carolina, Pembroke
- “Lord of Misrule: The Life and Times of George Ferrers”
- (One month, March '11)
Sara Brooks, Lecturer, Princeton University
- “Instituting Bodies, Interpreting Ancient Order: Predecessors and Protestant Institution Building”
- (Two months, July – August '10)
Piers Brown, Post-doctoral Fellow, University of York
- “Donne and the Situation of Literate Work in Early Modern England”
- (Two months, September – October '10)
Mark Thornton Burnett, Professor of Renaissance Studies, Queen’s University, Belfast
- “Shakespeare and World Cinema”
- (One month, April '11)
David Carnegie, Professor of Theatre, Victoria University of Wellington
- “Works of John Webster, V. 4”
- (Three months, April – June '11)
Kathleen Comerford, Professor of History, Georgia Southern University
- “Jesuit Foundations and Medici Power, 1541–1700”
- (One month, July '10)
Ambereen Dadabhoy, Lecturer in Western Languages and Literature, Bogazici University
- “The Stage Turk: Suleyman the Magnificent on the English Stage”
- (Three months, March – May '11)
Jason Denman, Associate Professor of English, Utica College
- “Artificial Shadows: The Skepticism of Seventeenth-Century English Tragedy”
- (One month, July '10)
Francesca Di Blasio, Assistant Professor of English Literature, University of Trento
- “The Antipodes in Early Modern Account: Heresy, Utopia, and Travel”
- (Three months, February – March '11)
Cary Di Pietro, Sessional Lecturer II in English and Drama, University of Toronto at Mississauga
- “Seeing through Shakespeare: Visual Culture and Performance in England, 1660–1960”
- (One month, December '10)
Jeffrey Doty, Assistant Professor of English, West Texas A & M University
- “Popularity and Publicity in Shakespeare’s Theater”
- (One month, July '10)
Julie Eckerle, Assistant Professor of English, University of Minnesota, Morris
- “Romancing the Self: A Study of Early Modern English-Women’s Life Writing”
- (One month, June '11)
Ian Gadd, Senior Lecturer in English, Bath Spa University
- “Copyright and Corporate Publishing in the Stationers’ Company, 1617–1710”
- (Four months, January through July '11)
Anthony Guneratne, Associate Professor of Communication, Florida Atlantic University
- “Rediscovering Shakespeare: the Role of Archives in Reconstructing the Shakespeare Film Canon”
- (Two months, March – April '11)
Karl Gunther, Assistant Professor of History, University of Miami
- “The Ideological Origins of English Puritanism, 1525–1590”
- (One month, July '10)
R. Carter Hailey, Research Associate, The College of William and Mary
- “The Shakespeare Papers”
- (Three months, September – November '10)
Jeffery Hankins, Assistant Professor of History, Louisiana Tech University
- “The Dangerous Days of Religious Refugees”
- (Six weeks, tbd)
Jacob Heil, Independent Scholar, Baltimore, MD
- “Making Poems: A Bibliographic Investigation of Poems by J.D.”
- (One month, July '10)
Jonathan Hsy, Assistant Professor of English, George Washington University
- “Polyglot Production: Multilingual Writing and London Trade, 1340–1540”
- (Three months, September – November '10)
Mariko Ichikawa, Professor [of English], Tohoku University
- “A Study of Early Modern Basic Theatrical Terms”
- (Three months, April – June '11)
Robert Jones, Senior Lecturer in English, University of Leeds
- “Mary Tickell’s Letters to her Sister”
- (One month, July '10)
Sean Keilen, Associate Professor of English, College of William and Mary
- “Circle of Affection: Imitation and Tradition in Renaissance Poetry”
- (Three months, June – August '10)
Gerard Kilroy, Honorary Visiting Professor, University College London
- “’Beyond the sownde of tounge or quill’: the Impact, in Print and in Manuscript, of Edmund Campion, S.J.”
- (Three months, tbd)
Brian Lockey, Associate Professor of English, St. John’s University
- “Catholics, Royalists, Cosmopolitans: Writing at the Margins of Early Modern England”
- (One month, March '11)
Jesus López-Peláez Casellas, Associate Professor of English, University of Jaén
- “The Representation of the Muslim, Jewish, and Spanish Other in the Construction of the English Early Modern Identity”
- (Six weeks, July – August '10)
Katherine Maynard, Associate Professor of French, Washington College
- “Guillaume Du Bartas’ Epic Endeavors”
- (One month, July '10)
Richard C. McCoy, Professor of English, Queens College, CUNY
- “Faith in Shakespeare”
- (Two months, November – December '10)
David McInnis, Ph.D. Candidate (degree in hand by time of residence), University of Melbourne
- “The Lost Plays Database (lostplays.org)”
- (One month, February '11)
Dieter Mehl, Professor Emeritus of English, University of Bonn
- “A Variorum Edition of Shakespeare’s ‘Poems’”
- (Two months, May – June '11)
Shannon Miller, Professor of English, Temple University
- “On the Margins of History: Studies in Pamphlet Collections”
- (Three months, March – May '11)
Melissa Mowry, Associate Professor of English, St. John’s University
- “Ties that Bind: The Hermeneutics of Collectivity and the English Literary Imagination, 1642–1748”
- (Three months, August – October '10)
Alan H. Nelson, Professor Emeritus of English, University of California, Berkeley
- “The Library, Manuscripts, Life, and Opinions of Richard Smith (1590–1675)”
- (Three months, September – November '10)
Webster Newbold, Associate Professor of English, Ball State University
- “The English Secretary by Angel Day: a Critical Edition”
- (One month, July '10)
Corinne Noirot-Maguire, Assistant Professor of French, Virginia Tech
- “Jean de la Taille’s Dramatic Quill”
- (One month, March '11)
Veronica O’Mara, Senior Lecturer, University of Hull
- “A Critical Edition of Thomas Wimbledon’s Paul’s Cross Sermon of c. 1387”
- (One month, May '11)
Jose Roberto O’Shea, Professor of English, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
- “Annotated Verse Translation of Shakespeare’s Two Noble Kinsmen”
- (Three months, August – October '10)
Lena Cowen Orlin, Professor of English, Georgetown University
- “The Textual Life of Things in Early Modern England”
- (Two months, June – September '10)
Mark Rankin, Assistant Professor of English, James Madison University
- “The Myth of Henry VIII in Early Modern England”
- (Three months, January – March '11)
Dosia Reichardt, Lecturer, James Cook University
- “‘Death in a New Dress’: Seventeenth-Century Comic Elegies and the Culture of Mourning”
- (One month, November '10)
Kate Rumbold, Research Fellow, Shakespeare Institute, Birmingham
- “Shakespeare Anthologized”
- (Two months, June – July '11)
Monica Santini, Research Fellow, University of Padua
- “The Queen’s Other Isle: Elizabeth I’s Letters to Ireland”
- (Two months, October – November '10)
Kathryn Schwarz, Associate Professor of English, Vanderbilt University
- “Counterfactual Women: Femininity and Teleology in Early Modern England”
- (Three months, October – December '10)
Marlis Schweitzer, Assistant Professor of Theatre, York University
- “Bringing the World to Broadway: Tracking the Transnational Trade in Theatrical Commodities”
- (Two months, tbd)
Jessica Sharkey, Research Fellow, Wolfson College, Cambridge
- “Thomas Wolsey’s Reputation and its European Context”
- (Three months, September – November)
Ian Smith, Professor of English, Lafayette College
- “Fabricated Identities: Racial Cross-Dressing on the Early Modern Stage”
- (One month, October '10)
Abraham Stoll, Associate Professor of English, University of San Diego
- “Thus Conscience in Early Modern England”
- (One month, June '10)
Felicity Stout, Research Associate, University of Sheffield
- “Giles Fletcher the Elder and the Elizabethan Commonwealth”
- (Two months, July – August '10)
Catherine Thomas, Assistant Professor of English, College of Charleston
- “Shakespeare and the Graphic Arts: Sketching the Past”
- (One month, March '10)
Anke Timmermann, Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Glasgow
- “How Bess of Hardwick Read the News”
- (One month, May – June '11)
David Trim, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Reading
- “Tyranny, Resistance, and the Calvinist Ideology of Holy War, 1560–1650”
- (Three months, August – September '10)
Angus Vine, Lecturer in Early Modern Literature, University of Sussex
- “Manuscripts, Merchants, and Miscellanea”
- (One month, July – August '10)
Andrew Walkling, Dean’s Assistant Professor of Early Modern Studies, SUNY, Binghamton
- “Instruments of Absolutism: Restoration Court Culture and the Epideictic Mode”
- (Three months, April – June '11)
J. Christopher Warner, Professor of English, Le Moyne College
- “Tottel’s Miscellany in the Marian Book Market”
- (Three months, December '10 – February '11)
Adrian C. Weimer, Instructional Assistant Professor of Religion, University of Mississippi
- “Divine Consolations: A Cultural History of Affliction”
- (One month, tbd)
Joshua Westgard, Haslam Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Marco Institute, University of Tennessee
- “Bede’s History and its Readers in the Age of Print”
- (One month, July '10)
Rachel Willie, Teaching Associate in English, University of York
- “Staging Revolution: Drama, Reinvention, and Historical Interpretation”
- (Two months, January – March '11)
David Worrall, Professor of English, Nottingham Trent University
- “Performing Britannia”
- (One month, December '10 – January '11)
2009–2010 short-term fellows
Panagiota Batsaki, Fellow in English, St. John’s College, Cambridge
- “Narratives of Experience: Empiricism, Induction, and the Eighteenth-Century Novel”
Julie Biggs, Senior Paper Conservator, Library of Congress
- “The Conservation of Iron-Gall Ink on Paper”
Erika Boeckeler, Assistant Professor of English, Kenyon College
- “The Dramatization of the Alphabet in the Renaissance”
Joyce Boro, Associate Professor of English, Université de Montréal
- A Critical Edition and Study of the Reception of Margaret Tyler’s Mirrour of Princely Deeds and Knighthood
Tom Cartelli, Professor of English and Film Studies, Muhlenberg College
- “Producing Disorder: The Construction of Misrule in Early Modern England, New England, and Ireland: 1570–1640”
Raz Chen-Morris, Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Studies, Bar Ilan University
- “The Quality of Nothing and the Visual Economy of Early Modern Science”
Christopher Crosbie, Assistant Professor of English, North Carolina State University
- “Philosophies of Retribution: Noumena, Phenomena, And Early Modern Revenge Tragedy”
Eamon Darcy, Ph.D. candidate, Trinity College, Dublin (degree by residency)
- “The 1641 Depositions and Contemporary Print Culture”
Andrew Escobedo, Associate Professor of English, Ohio University (declined)
- “Renaissance Allegories of the Will”
Lori Anne Ferrell, Professor of Early Modern History and Literature, Claremont Graduate University
- “The St. Paul’s Sermons of John Donne, 1623–25”
Andrew Foster, Visiting Fellow, University of Southampton
- “Dioceses of England & Wales”
Susan Frye, Professor of English, University of Wyoming
- “The Iconography of Mary Queen of Scots”
David George, Professor of English, Urbana College
- "A New Variorum Coriolanus"
Stuart Gillespie, Reader in English Literature, University of Glasgow
- “The Classics in Translation, Publication and Performance, 1558–1660”
Kathryn Gucer, Lecturer in English, Northwestern University
- “Revolution Across”
Andrew Hadfield, Professor of English, University of Sussex
- "A Biography of Edmund Spenser"
Robert Hornback, Associate Professor of English and Theater, Oglethorpe University
- “Early Blackface Fools and their Legacy”
Herbert A. Johnson, Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, University of South Carolina
- “Sir Edward Coke and the Divergence of English and American Constitutionalism”
Janet Johnson, Scholar-in-Residence, Newberry Library
- “Shakespeare’s Romeo and Dante’s Giulietta: The Story of a Myth in Music”
Eric Johnson-DeBaufre, Ph.D. candidate, Boston University (degree by residency)
- “The Letters of Nathaniel Bacon and the Memorialization of Kett’s Rebellion”
John King, Humanities Distinguished Professor of English and Religious Studies, The Ohio State University
- “The Reformation of the Book, 1450–1650”
Chris Kyle, Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University
- “The Oxford Francis Bacon, Vol. VII”
Dalia Leonardo, Assistant Professor/Metadata Librarian, Mina Rees Library, CUNY
- “‘Behold the air filled with prayers and processions’: The Catholic League in Paris, 1589–1593”
Jenny Mann, Assistant Professor of English, Cornell University
- “Outlaw Rhetoric: Vernacular Eloquence in Early Modern England”
Timothy McCall, Assistant Professor of Art History, Villanova University
- “Art, Gender, and Chivalric Masculinity in Early Renaissance Italy”
Russ McDonald, Professor of English Literature, Goldsmith’s College, University of London
- “Elizabethan Poetics and the Culture of Symmetry”
Mary Pollard Murray, Assistant Professor of English, Columbia University
- “The Poet and the Prison from Chaucer to Milton”
Joseph Navitsky, Assistant Professor of English, University of Southern Mississippi
- “Religious Conflict and the Rearticulation of Early Modern Satire”
Louise Noble, Lecturer in English, University of New England (Australia)
- "‘Floating Upwards’: The Rhetoric and Practice of Water Management in Early Modern England"
Marcy Norton, Associate Professor of History, George Washington University
- “The Limits of Anthropocentrism: People and Animals in the Early Modern World”
Elizabeth Pallitto, Independent Scholar
- “Courtier, Courtesan, Heretic, Saint: Public Image and Private Polemics of Four Writers in Counter-Reformation Italy”
Varsha Panjwani, Ph.D. candidate, University of York (degree by residency)
- “Performing Renaissance Drama: Collaboration versus Shakespeare”
Gerard Passannante, Assistant Professor of English, University of Maryland
- “Gabriel Harvey and the Deep Analogy”
Douglas Pfeiffer, Assistant Professor of English, Stony Brook University, SUNY
- “Renaissance Literary Biography and the Making of Authorial Intent”
Beth Quitslund, Associate Professor of English, Ohio University
- "The Whole Booke of Psalmes: A Critical Edition"
Shankar Raman, Associate Professor of English, MIT
- “A World of Figures”
Nigel Ramsay, Senior Research Fellow, History, University College London
- “The Heraldic Manuscripts in the Folger Shakespeare Library and their Scribes”
Emma Rhatigan, Lecturer in Renaissance Literature, Queen’s University Belfast
- “John Donne’s Sermons Preached at the Inns of Court: A Critical Edition”
Katherine Rowe, Professor of English, Bryn Mawr
- “Robert Hamilton Ball Papers: Exhibition and Theory”
Regina Schwartz, Professor of English, Northwestern University
- “Idolatry in Early Modern England”
Sarah K. Scott, Assistant Professor of English, Mount St. Mary’s University
- “Performance Index: New Variorum Edition of Julius Caesar”
Garrett Sullivan, Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University
- “Sleep and the Human in the Renaissance”
Stephen Taylor, Professor of Early Modern History, University of Reading
- “Newsletters, Newspapers, and News Networks: English Perception of Europe in the Late Seventeenth Century”
Wendy Thompson, Independent Scholar
- “The Mysteries of Fancesco Marcolini’s Le Sorti”
Daniel Vitkus, Associate Professor of English, Florida State University
- “Anglo-Islamic Exchange, English Renaissance Texts, and the Origins of Modernity”
Anthony James West, Independent Scholar
- “First Folio Project”
Lina Wilder, Assistant Professor of English, Connecticut College
- “Shakespeare’s Memory Theater”
Paul Yachnin, Tomlinson Professor of Shakespeare Studies, McGill University
- “Shakespearean Publicity”
2008–2009 short-term fellows
Geoff Baker, Temporary Lecturer in Early Modern History, Keele University
- “Catholic Reading Practices and Cultural Politics in Early Modern England, c. 1580–1715”
Mark Bayer, Assistant Professor of English, American University of Beirut
- “Nineteenth-Century American Editions of Shakespeare”
Peter Beal, Senior Research Fellow, Institute of English Studies, University of London
- “Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts, 1450–1700”
Elizabeth Bearden, Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Maryland
- “Repainting Romance: Ekphrasis and Otherness in Renaissance Imitation of Greek Romance”
Ilona Bell, Professor of English, Williams College
- “An Edition of Mary Wroth’s Pamphilia to Amphilanthus”
Anston Bosman, Associate Professor of English, Amherst College
- “The Northern Way: Renaissance England in North Sea Culture”
Ruth Connolly, Research Associate, School of English, Newcastle University
- “The Complete Poetry of Robert Herrick”
Alice Dailey, Assistant Professor of English, Villanova University
- “From Acts to Monuments: Martyrology and the English Reformation”
Holly Dugan, Assistant Professor of English, The George Washington University
- “The Ephemeral History of Perfume: Scent and Sense in Early Modern England”
Gabriel Egan, Reader in Shakespeare Studies, Loughborough University
- “Reading Shakespeare’s Mind: Twentieth-Century Editorial Theory and Practice”
Anthony Ellis, Assistant Professor of English, Western Michigan University
- “‘Il Shax’: Literary Translations, Theatrical Adaptations of Shakespeare in Italy”
Catherine Field, Assistant Professor of English, San Diego State University
- “‘Many Hands’: Early Modern Englishwomen’s Recipes and the Writing of Food, Politics, and the Self”
Valerie Forman, Assistant Professor of English, University of Colorado, Boulder
- “Developing New Worlds: Property, Freedom, and the Economics of Representation in Early Modern England”
Thomas Freeman, Research Officer, John Foxe Project, University of Sheffield
- “A Comparative Analysis of the Protestant Martyrologies”
David Greer, Emeritus Professor of Music, Durham University
- “An Edition of Musica Transalpina”
Joseph J. Gwara, Associate Professor of Spanish, United States Naval Academy
- “A Gallery of Grotesques: Woodcut Initials in Sixteenth-Century English Books”
F. Elizabeth Hart, Associate Professor of English, University of Connecticut, Storrs
- “Reading, Consciousness, and Renaissance Romance”
Grace Ioppolo, Reader in English Literature, University of Reading
- “Dulwich College: The First Early Modern Theater History Library”
Miriam Jacobson, Assistant Professor of English, Wake Forest University
- “Antiquity and the East in Early Modern English Poetry”
Carol Ann Johnston, Associate Professor of English, Dickinson College
- “‘Heavenly Perspective’: Thomas Traherne and Seventeenth-Century Visual Traditions”
Lisa Kasmer, Assistant Professor of English, Clark University
- “Regendering History: Gender and Genres of History, 1760–1840”
Krista Kesselring, Associate Professor of History, Dalhousie University
- “Criminal Forfeitures in English Law, c. 1170–1870”
Gerard Kilroy, Independent Scholar, Bath, England
- “Controlling the Margins: A Bibliographic Study of the Works of Sir John Harington (1560–1612)”
Maria Koundoura, Associate Professor of Literature, Emerson College
- “Desire Lines: Metaphors of the Global City”
Barbara Kreps, Associate Professor of English, Emerita, University of Pisa
- “Legal Theory, Legal Practice, and Early Modern Theater”
Angela Locatelli, Professor of English, University of Bergamo
- “Rhetoric as an Interface Between Different Epistemologies in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England”
Gail Marshall, Reader in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Oxford Brookes University
- “Ellen Terry and Shakespeare”
Jeffrey Masten, Associate Professor of English and Gender Studies, Northwestern University
- “Spelling Shakespeare and Other Essays in Queer Philology”
Kirk Melnikoff, Assistant Professor of English, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
- “The Literary and Political Ventures of Nicholas Ling”
Nick Moschovakis, Independent Scholar, Washington, DC
- “Shakespeare, Vergilian?: Allusion and Early Ironic Readings of Aeneid 6”
Paul Nelles, Associate Professor of History, Carleton University
- “Christoph Froschauer and Conrad Gesner: Printing in Zurich Between the Reformation and the Renaissance”
Meredith Neuman, Assistant Professor of Early American Literature, Clark University
- “Letter and Spirit: Theories of the Sermon in Puritan New England”
Aysha Pollnitz, Research Fellow in History, Trinity College, Cambridge
- “The Theory and Practice of Consilium in the Reign of Mary I”
Jordi Sanchez-Marti, Assistant Professor of English, University of Alicante
- “Palmerin d’Oliva: An Edition of the English Translation”
Marc Schachter, Assistant Professor of French, Duke University
- “Desiring Philology and the History of Sexuality”
Richard Schoch, Professor of the History of Culture, Queen Mary, University of London
- “Henry Irving and Shakespeare”
Michael Steppat, Professor of English Literature, University of Bayreuth
- “New Variorum Edition of The Merry Wives of Windsor”
Michael Suarez, SJ, Associate Professor of English, Fordham University
- “Plate Subscription and the Patronage of Engravings for Learned Books in England from John Ogilby to the Oxford University Press”
Kathy Temple, Associate Professor of English, Georgetown University
- “Lady Law Lies Alone: Women, Law, and Culture in the Anglo-American Eighteenth Century”
David Trim, Visiting Professor of History, Pacific Union College
- “The Puritan Ideology of Holy War in Continental Context, c. 1560–1640”
Michael Witmore, Associate Professor of English, Carnegie Mellon University
- “Wisdom and the Book of Experience”
James Woolley, Smith Professor of English, Lafayette College
- “The Canon and Chronology of Swift’s Poems”