Folger Institute 2009–2010 short-term fellows: Difference between revisions

mNo edit summary
m (regularizing punctuation)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Folger Institute]] short-term fellows for the 2009-2010 academic year.
[[Folger Institute]] short-term fellows for the 2009–2010 academic year. For Scholarly Programs, see our [[2009–2010 Folger Institute Scholarly Programs|2009–2010 program archive.]]


[[Panagiota Batsaki]], Fellow in English, St. John’s College, Cambridge
[[Panagiota Batsaki]], Fellow in English, St. John’s College, Cambridge
Line 14: Line 14:
   
   
[[Thomas Cartelli]], Professor of English and Film Studies, Muhlenberg College
[[Thomas 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”
:“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
[[Raz Chen-Morris]], Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Studies, Bar Ilan University
Line 29: Line 29:
   
   
[[Lori Anne Ferrell]], Professor of Early Modern History and Literature, Claremont Graduate University
[[Lori Anne Ferrell]], Professor of Early Modern History and Literature, Claremont Graduate University
:“The St. Paul’s Sermons of John Donne, 1623-25”
:“The St. Paul’s Sermons of John Donne, 1623–25”
   
   
[[Andrew Foster]], Visiting Fellow, University of Southampton
[[Andrew Foster]], Visiting Fellow, University of Southampton
Line 41: Line 41:
   
   
[[Stuart Gillespie]], Reader in English Literature, University of Glasgow
[[Stuart Gillespie]], Reader in English Literature, University of Glasgow
:“The Classics in Translation, Publication and Performance, 1558-1660”
:“The Classics in Translation, Publication and Performance, 1558–1660”
   
   
[[Kathryn Gucer]], Lecturer in English, Northwestern University
[[Kathryn Gucer]], Lecturer in English, Northwestern University
Line 62: Line 62:
   
   
[[John King]], Humanities Distinguished Professor of English and Religious Studies, The Ohio State University
[[John King]], Humanities Distinguished Professor of English and Religious Studies, The Ohio State University
:“The Reformation of the Book, 1450-1650”
:“The Reformation of the Book, 1450–1650”
   
   
[[Chris Kyle]], Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University
[[Chris Kyle]], Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University
Line 68: Line 68:
   
   
[[Dalia Leonardo]], Assistant Professor/Metadata Librarian, Mina Rees Library, CUNY
[[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”
:“‘Behold the air filled with prayers and processions’: The Catholic League in Paris, 1589–1593”
   
   
[[Jenny Mann]], Assistant Professor of English, Cornell University
[[Jenny Mann]], Assistant Professor of English, Cornell University
Line 115: Line 115:
:“John Donne’s Sermons Preached at the Inns of Court: A Critical Edition”
:“John Donne’s Sermons Preached at the Inns of Court: A Critical Edition”
   
   
[[Kathy Rowe]], Professor of English, Bryn Mawr
[[Katherine Rowe]], Professor of English, Bryn Mawr
:“Robert Hamilton Ball Papers: Exhibition and Theory”
:“Robert Hamilton Ball Papers: Exhibition and Theory”
   
   
Line 131: Line 131:
   
   
[[Wendy Thompson]], Independent Scholar
[[Wendy Thompson]], Independent Scholar
:“The Mysteries of Fancesco Marcolini’s Le Sorti”
:“The Mysteries of Fancesco Marcolini’s ''Le Sorti''”
   
   
[[Daniel Vitkus]], Associate Professor of English, Florida State University
[[Daniel Vitkus]], Associate Professor of English, Florida State University

Latest revision as of 10:09, 4 March 2015

Folger Institute short-term fellows for the 2009–2010 academic year. For Scholarly Programs, see our 2009–2010 program archive.

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

Thomas 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”