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Recently published: Shakespeare and Wales

Shakespeare and Wales: From the Marches to the Assembly, edited by Willy Maley and Philip Schwyzer has recently been published by Ashgate.

BERJAYA

Shakespeare and Wales offers ‘a Welsh correction’ to a long-standing deficiency. It explores the place of Wales in Shakespeare’s drama and in Shakespeare criticism, covering ground from the absorption of Wales into the Tudor state in 1536 to Shakespeare on the Welsh stage in the twenty-first century. Shakespeare’s major Welsh characters, Fluellen and Glendower, feature prominently, but the Welsh dimension of the histories as a whole, “The Merry Wives of Windsor”, and “Cymbeline” also come in for examination. The volume also explores the place of Welsh-identified contemporaries of Shakespeare such as Thomas Churchyard and John Dee, and English writers with pronounced Welsh interests such as Spenser, Drayton and Dekker. This volume brings together experts in the field from both sides of the Atlantic, including leading practitioners of British Studies, in order to establish a detailed historical context that illustrates the range and richness of Shakespeare’s Welsh sources and resources, and confirms the degree to which Shakespeare continues to impact upon Welsh culture and identity even as the process of devolution in Wales serves to shake the foundations of Shakespeare’s status as an unproblematic English or British dramatist.

The publication of the book will be celebrated with a symposium at Cardiff University on 23 April 2010 (see post below).

Shakespeare and Wales: Symposium and Book Launch at Cardiff, 23/4

Shakespeare and Wales: Public Lecture and Symposium

Friday April 23rd, 2010

The afternoon will include a lecture by the award winning theatre director, Michael Bogdanov, and a symposium led by scholars from around the world. The event is spurred by the publication of Shakespeare and Wales: From the Marches to the Assembly (see post above).

Wallace Lecture Theatre, Main Building

12pm Public Lecture:

Michael Bogdanov, “The Welsh in Shakespeare”

2.30-6pm Symposium: “Shakespeare and Wales”

Participants include:

David Baker (North Carolina)

Michael Bogdanov (Theatre/Film Director)

Martin Coyle (Cardiff)

Dominique Goy-Blanquet (Picardie)

Katie Gramich (Cardiff)

Lisa Hopkins (Sheffield Hallam)

Chris Ivic (Bath Spa)

Margaret Jones-Davies (Sorbonne)

Willy Maley (Glasgow)

Stewart Mottram (Aberystwyth)

Philip Schwyzer (Exeter)

Margaret Tudeau-Clayton (Neuchâtel)

Richard Wilson (Cardiff)

Generously supported by Cardiff University’s School of English, Communication and Philosophy, and by Ashgate Press.

Admission is free, but please register your interest in attending by sending an email to encap-events2010@cf.ac.uk or by telephone on 029 2087 6049. The event will take place in Cardiff University’s Main Building, opposite the Students’ Union on Park Place, CF10 3AT.

Selden Conference, Oxford, 24-26 June

John Selden (1584-1654): Scholarship in Context

24th-26th June, 2010 Magdalen College, Oxford

In association with: the Centre for Early Modern Studies, Oxford, and the Centre for the Study of the Book at the Bodleian.

This will be the first major international conference on John Selden (1584-1654), to celebrate the 400th anniversary of his first publications.

John Selden, ‘the monarch in letters’ (Jonson) and England’s ‘chief of learned men’ (Milton) was Britain’s leading scholar, antiquary and jurist. He was a key figure in the advance of Oriental learning in the West: his achievements in Hebraic studies were unparalleled, and he promoted the study of Arabic and Islamic culture. He was a renowned theorist of international law (with his Mare Clausum) and of natural law (with his De Iure Naturali & Gentium). He was also a leading Member of Parliament, especially during the Civil War, and an active member of the Westminster Assembly. His work provoked praise and polemic from scholars, theologians and philosophers. His correspondence ranged throughout the European Republic of Letters and reached to Aleppo in Syria. He was the greatest scholarly book collector in England; more than 8000 volumes of his library were deposited in the Bodleian, where he gave his name to the ‘Selden End’ of Duke Humfrey’s library. This conference aims to build on G.J. Toomer’s recent magnum opus, John Selden: A Life in Scholarship (OUP, 2009), to return Selden to the centre of the intellectual culture of his age.

Keynote speakers: G.J. Toomer, Mordechai Feingold, Peter Miller, Jason Rosenblatt, Richard Tuck

Speakers: Sharon Achinstein, Sir John Baker, Mark Bland, Hans Blom, Elizabethanne Boran, Christopher Brooks, Alan Coates, Theodor Dunkelgrün, Anthony Grafton, Simon Keynes, Vivienne Larminie, Jan Loop, Scott Mandelbrote, Anthony Milton, Sarah Mortimer, Martin Mulsow, Eric Nelson, Paul Nelles, Graham Parry, Annabel Patterson, Jean-Louis Quantin, Julian Roberts, Richard Sharpe, Harvey Shoolman, Colin Tite, Chad van Dixhoorn, Dirk van Miert, Joanna Weinberg

Sponsored by:

The John Fell OUP Research Fund; The Cultures of Knowledge Project; The Royal Historical Society; The English Faculty, University of Oxford

For full details and to register see:

http://www.cems.ox.ac.uk/selden/

Published in:  on at 1:55 pm Leave a Comment

Cuppe Refilled

The lights have been out at A Cuppe of Newes for the past few weeks, but the blog is now active again – check back for regular postings of medieval and early modern events at Exeter, around the southwest … and beyond.

Published in:  on at 1:52 pm Leave a Comment

Marvell and London: Oxford Conference July 2010

‘Marvell and London’

A two day conference to be held at Keble College, Oxford, 9-10 July, 2010, will focus on Marvell’s representation of London in his work, and on the imbrication of his poetic and satirical agendas in the landscape, politics and society of the capital. Speakers will interrogate Marvell’s place within the government of the Protectorate, his relations with other London writers, his sense of place and also his sense of dis-placement from his original base in the north, in his home city of Hull and with the Fairfax household at Nun Appleton.

Keynote speakers: Steven Zwicker, Derek Hirst, Martin Dzelzainis. Also: Ian Archer, Nicholas McDowell, David Norbrook, and Margaret Kean.

Papers include:

Martin Dzelzainis, ‘Marvell south of the river’

Nick McDowell, ”I am a free-born Roman; suffer then, / That I amongst you live a Citizen’: Marvell, Herrick, and the Poetic Culture of Inter-War London’

David Norbrook, ‘Epicurean landscapes’

Diane Purkiss, ‘Bod MS Eng.Poet d. 49: what is it?’

A panel of Princeton and Oxford graduate students

Published in:  on March 2, 2010 at 9:12 pm Leave a Comment

The Copious Text: Sussex Conference, 18/5/2010

The Copious Text: Encyclopaedic Books in Early Modern England

18th May 2010, School of English Social Space (Arts B274)

Entry is free and all are welcome

10:00  Tea/Coffee

10:30 Welcome from Prof Tom Healy

10:45 – 12:15

Chair: Prof Andrew Hadfield

Tom Freeman (Cambridge University and the Foxe Project): ‘Size Matters: Foxe’s “Book of Martyrs” as an Encyclopaedia for the Godly’.

Neil Rhodes (St Andrews): ‘Common Knowledge: Accessing Shakespeare’s Encyclopedias’

12:15-13:15  Lunch

13:15-14:45

Chair: Dr Margaret Healy

Angus Vine (University of Sussex) ‘Curious Readers: Collaboration and Cooperation in Camden’s Britannia’

Kathryn Murphy (Jesus College, Oxford): ‘Polymathy and Polypraxy: Kinds of Copiousness in Robert Burton’

14:45-15:15  Tea/Coffee break

15:15-16:45

Chair: Dr Mathew Dimmock

Kevin Killeen (University of York): ‘The Morsel and the Meal: The Early Modern Theopaedia’

Kate Bennett (New College, Oxford): ‘Aubrey and the Antiquarians’

16:45-17:15   Tea/Coffee Break

17:15-18:00

Chair: Prof Brian Cummings

Closing remarks and roundtable discussion

19:30

Symposium Dinner

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Wednesday: Toulalan on the Abuse of Children in Early Modern England

The next seminar in the Exeter Early Modern Seminar series takes place this Wednesday 3 March. The speaker is Dr. Sarah Toulalan (Exeter, History) and her paper is entitled:

‘Child Sexual Abuse in Early Modern England’

The seminar will take place in Amory 417 at 4pm and will be video-conferenced to Tremough, DM Seminar D. Refreshments will follow.

Renaissance Reading Group Goes to the Devil

The Renaissance Reading Group will be back on Wednesday 10th March at 4p.m. to discuss John Webster’s The White Devil. The group will meet in the Queen’s Postgraduate Common Room, barring any room clashes, but if necessary the convenors have vowed to reconvene in the pub! Everyone welcome, new members and old.

Monday: Raymond on Milton’s Angels

EXETER ENGLISH DEPARTMENT RESEARCH SEMINAR

Professor Joad Raymond

“Milton’s Angels”

Monday 1 March 3-5pm, Queen’s MR 1

Joad Raymond is Professor of English at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of ‘The Invention of the Newspaper: English Newsbooks, 1641-1649′ (1996), ‘Pamphlets and Pamphleteering in Early Modern Britain’ (2003), and, most recently, ‘Milton’s Angels: the Early-Modern Imagination’ (2010).

There will be a wine reception following the seminar in the Queen’s SCR.

Renaissance Reading Group Meets the Man in the Moone (Lyly’s Endymion)

The Exeter Renaissance Reading Group will meet next Wednesday 10th February at 4 p.m. in the Queen’s SCR. We will be reading John Lyly’s Endymion, so join us for a discussion of a very Elizabethan tale of love, sorcery, damsels confined to castles, magic fountains, and a hero bewitched into enchanted sleep.  The full text in modern spelling is available online.