Folger Institute 2008–2009 long-term fellows: Difference between revisions
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'''Mellon Fellows''' | '''Mellon Fellows''' | ||
Alec Ryrie, Reader in Church History, University of Durham | [[Alec Ryrie]], Reader in Church History, University of Durham | ||
:''Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain'' | :''Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain'' | ||
David Schalkwyk, Professor of English, University of Cape Town | [[David Schalkwyk]], Professor of English, University of Cape Town | ||
:''Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries'' | :''Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries'' | ||
Revision as of 14:57, 29 August 2014
Fellows in residence at the Folger Institute for 2008-2009. For Scholarly programs, see our 2008-2009 program archive page.
Mellon Fellows
Alec Ryrie, Reader in Church History, University of Durham
- Piety and the Experience of Protestantism in Early Modern Britain
David Schalkwyk, Professor of English, University of Cape Town
- Humanism and Love’s Transgression in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries
NEH Fellows
Professor Jonathan Gil Harris, Professor of English, George Washington University
- Shakespeare and Literary Theory
Professor Caroline M. Hibbard, Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- A Place at Court: Palaces and Courtiers of Henrietta Maria
Professor H. C. Erik Midelfort, Professor of History, University of Virginia
- Suppression of Dissent in Early Modern Germany, 1650 – 1750
ACLS/Burkhardt Fellow
Hannibal Hamlin, Associate Professor of English, The Ohio State University
- Shakespeare and Biblical Culture