1996–1997 Folger Institute Scholarly Programs: Difference between revisions

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:A Fall 1996 Semester-Length Seminar
:A Fall 1996 Semester-Length Seminar
:This seminar is designed specifically for doctoral candidates whose dissertation work would benefit either from recourse to the Folger Library collections or from ongoing discussion of the methodological and theoretical issues involved in the conduct of interdisciplinary scholarship—or, ideally, from both. Especially relevant will be dissertations in literature or history that deal with books printed in England between 1470 and 1700 or with manuscripts held by the Folger Shakespeare Library either in collection or on film (as, for instance, the State Papers Domestic or the manuscripts of the Marquis of Salisbury held at Hatfield House).
:This seminar is designed specifically for doctoral candidates whose dissertation work would benefit either from recourse to the Folger Library collections or from ongoing discussion of the methodological and theoretical issues involved in the conduct of interdisciplinary scholarship—or, ideally, from both. Especially relevant will be dissertations in literature or history that deal with books printed in England between 1470 and 1700 or with manuscripts held by the Folger Shakespeare Library either in collection or on film (as, for instance, the State Papers Domestic or the manuscripts of the Marquis of Salisbury held at Hatfield House).
:'''Director:''' [[Leeds Barroll]], Presidential Research Professor of English at the University of Maryland at Baltimore County, is the author of ''Politics, Plague, and Shakespeare's Theatre: The Stuart Years'' (1991), ''Shakespearean Tragedy'' (1984), ''Artificial Persons'' (1974), and the forthcoming ''Inventing Queenship: Anna and the Culture of the First Stuart Court''. He is the founding editor of ''Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England and Shakespeare Studies''.
:'''Director:''' [[Leeds Barroll]], Presidential Research Professor of English at the University of Maryland at Baltimore County, is the author of ''Politics, Plague, and Shakespeare's Theatre: The Stuart Years'' (1991), ''Shakespearean Tragedy'' (1984), ''Artificial Persons'' (1974), and ''Inventing Queenship: Anna and the Culture of the First Stuart Court'' (2000). He is the founding editor of ''Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England and Shakespeare Studies''.

Latest revision as of 10:34, 25 January 2017

Researching the Renaissance

A Fall 1996 Semester-Length Seminar
This seminar is designed specifically for doctoral candidates whose dissertation work would benefit either from recourse to the Folger Library collections or from ongoing discussion of the methodological and theoretical issues involved in the conduct of interdisciplinary scholarship—or, ideally, from both. Especially relevant will be dissertations in literature or history that deal with books printed in England between 1470 and 1700 or with manuscripts held by the Folger Shakespeare Library either in collection or on film (as, for instance, the State Papers Domestic or the manuscripts of the Marquis of Salisbury held at Hatfield House).
Director: Leeds Barroll, Presidential Research Professor of English at the University of Maryland at Baltimore County, is the author of Politics, Plague, and Shakespeare's Theatre: The Stuart Years (1991), Shakespearean Tragedy (1984), Artificial Persons (1974), and Inventing Queenship: Anna and the Culture of the First Stuart Court (2000). He is the founding editor of Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England and Shakespeare Studies.