Lena Cowen Orlin: Difference between revisions

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This page reflects a scholar's association with the [[Folger Institute]].
This page reflects a scholar's association with the [[Folger Institute]].
Lena Cowen Orlin, Professor of English, Georgetown University, is the author of ''Locating Privacy in Tudor London'' (Oxford, 2009) and ''Private Matters and Public Culture in Post-Reformation England'' (Cornell, 1994). Her edited volumes include ''A Sourcebook for English Studies: The Renaissance'' (2009), ''Shakespeare without Boundaries: Essays in Honor of Dieter Mehl'' (with Christa Jansohn and Stanley Wells, 2010), ''Staging Shakespeare: Essays in Honor of Alan C. Dessen'' (with Miranda Johnson-Haddad, 2007), ''Center or Margin: Revisions of the English Renaissance in Honor of Leeds Barroll'' (2006), ''New Casebooks Othello: Contemporary Critical Essays'' (2003), ''Shakespeare: An Oxford Guide'' (with Stanley Wells, 2003), ''Material London, ca. 1600'' (2000), and ''Elizabethan Households: An Anthology'' (1995).


=== Long-term fellowship ===
=== Long-term fellowship ===

Revision as of 13:51, 29 August 2014

This page reflects a scholar's association with the Folger Institute.

Long-term fellowship

The Private Life of William Shakespeare (Mellon, 2011-2012)

For a biography of William Shakespeare, I propose to focus on civic and ecclesiastical records to build fresh contexts for understanding his marriage to Anne Hathaway, his life in London, his retirement to Stratford, and his last will. A projected first chapter will revisit the identity and age of Anne Hathaway. A second chapter will discuss the couple’s working lives in Stratford and London. A third chapter will emphasize that by living in lodgings in London but purchasing property in Stratford, Shakespeare demonstrated a life-long commitment to the town of his birth. A fourth chapter will give a revisionist reading of the “second-best bed.” Although the book will focus on new research, it will necessarily address some of the myths of Shakespeare’s biography. To understand the development of these myths, the collections of the Folger Shakespeare Library are unrivalled. A year at the Folger would enable me to consult such important materials as contemporary marriage settlements and property transfers in the Stratford area, the later seventeenth-century diaries of Stratford vicar John Ward, and the nineteenth-century scrapbooks of J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps. My aim would be to complete the manuscript by the end of the fellowship year.

Scholarly Programs

Speaker, Shakespeare and the Problem of Biography (Conference, 2013-2014)

Organizer, Early Modern Cities in Comparative Perspective (Conference, 2012-2013)