Home
Shop  |  Calendar  |  Join  |  Buy Tickets  |  Hamnet  |  Site Rental  |  Press Room  
  
About UsWhat's OnUse the CollectionDiscover ShakespeareTeach & LearnFolger InstituteSupport Us
Research Fellowships
• Fellows
2004-2005 Fellows

   Sign up for E-news!
   Printer Friendly

2004-2005 Fellows



NEH Fellows
Alix Cooper, Assistant Professor of History, SUNY Stony Brook 

"Inventing the Indigenous: Writing Local Nature in Early Modern Europe"

 

Kathryn A. Edwards, Associate Professor of History, University of South Carolina 

"Living with Ghosts: The Dead in European Society from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment"

 

William H. Sherman, Professor of Early Modern Studies, University of York

"Paper Worlds: Travels and Texts in Early Modern England"

 

Mellon Fellows
Anston Bosman, Assistant Professor of English,  Amherst College

"Intertheatre in Renaissance Europe: Traveling Scripts, Players, Cultures"

 

Patricia Parker, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Stanford University

"Reading Early Modern Cultures: Reconstructing the Language of Shakespeare and Others"

 

ACLS/Burkhardt Fellow

Timothy Raylor, Associate Professor of English, Carleton College

"Hobbes"

 

Short-term Fellows

Denise Albanese, Associate Professor of English, George Mason University
“Browne on Blackness”

 

Timothy Billings, Assistant Professor of English, Middlebury College
“Glossing Shakespeare: Reading the Plays from the Bottom of the Page”

 

Joyce Boro, Assistant Professor of English, University of Montreal
“Reading Medieval Spanish Romance in Renaissance England”

 

Edmund Campos, Assistant Professor of English, Swarthmore College
“Translating the New World: England, Spain, and the Americas”

 

Matteo Casini, Research Associate, University of Padua
“The Diffusion of the Myth of Venice in England in the Seventeenth Century (1599–1669)”

 

Joseph Chaves, Lecturer in French & Italian, Princeton University
“The Spectator Project”

 

Adam Max Cohen, Assistant Professor of English, University of South Alabama
“Technology and the Self in Early Modern Literature”

 

Peter Erickson, Independent Scholar, Williamstown, MA
“Paul Robeson’s Othello and the Creation of a Multicultural Shakespeare”

 

Carie Euler, Ph.D. Candidate, Johns Hopkins University

“Lutheranism in England: Tudor Translations of Martin Luther”

 

Raphael Falco, Professor of English, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
“Cultural Genealogy: The Institution of a Myth”

 

Kenneth Fincham, Reader in History, University of Kent
“Altars Restored: The Changing Face of English Religious Worship, 1547–1700”

 

Thomas Freeman, Research Editor, British Academy John Foxe Project
“The Marian Martyrs: A Numerical, Social, and Historiographical Analysis”

 

Mary Fuller, Associate Professor of Literature, MIT
“Reading Hakluyt’s Voyages: 'America'”

 

Joseph Gwara, Associate Professor of Spanish, US Naval Academy
“The European Tranlations of Juan de Flores’s Grisel y Mirabella


Heather Hirschfeld, Assistant Professor of English, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
“The Theologics of English Renaissance Revenge Tragedy”

 

Christa Jansohn, Chair for British Culture, University of Bamberg
“Shakespeare Apocrypha: An Introduction”

 

Rebecca Laroche, Assistant Professor of English, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
“Herbal Rhetoric: Cultural Rhetoric and the Task of the Renaissance”

 

Carole Levin, Professor of History, University of Nebraska
“Dreams, Desires, and Politics in Early Modern England”

 

Erica Longfellow, Lecturer in English, Kingston University, UK
“The Performing History Project”

 

Fiona McNeill, Assistant Professor of Literature & Drama, SUNY, Purchase
“Shakespeare’s New World Words”

 

Kate Narveson, Assistant Professor of English, Luther College
“Do Souls have Sexes?: Weighing the Influence of Gender vs. Lay Status is Devotional Authorship”

 

Madalina Nicolaescu, Professor of English, University of Bucharest
“Shakespeare in Times of War”

 

Martin Orkin, Professor of English, University of Haifa

"Shakespeare and Unruly Masculinity"

 

Lena Cowen Orlin, Professor of English, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

"the Textual Life of Things in Early Modern England"

 

Jason Peacey, Senior Research Fellow, History of Parliament Trust
“Addition to Print: Adapting to the Print Revolution, 1550–1650”

 

Rachel Ramsey, Assistant Professor of English, Assumption College
“Constructing Credit and Building Trade in Early Modern London”

 

Fred Schurink, D.Phil. Candidate in English, Merton College, Oxford
“Manuscript Commonplace-Books and Literary Culture in Early Modern England, 1500–1700”

 

Kathryn Schwarz, Associate Professor of English, Vanderbilt University
“Femininity and Intention in Early Modern England”

 

John Shedd, Associate Professor of History, SUNY Cortland
“An Assailable State: Popular Resistance to Parliamentary Government during the English Civil War and Commonwealth, 1642–55”

 

Stuart Sillars, Professor of English, University of Bergen
“Reading Shakespeare, Seeing Shakespeare: The Illustrated Edition, 1709–1865”

 

Nicholas Smith, Post-doctoral Fellow, Beinecke Library, Yale University
“Commonplace Books, Miscellanies, and Eighteenth-Century Manuscript Culture”

 

Michael Steppat, Professor of English, University of Bayreuth
A New Variorum edition of The Merry Wives of Windsor

 

Mihoko Suzuki, Professor of English, University of Miami
“Gender, History, and Politics in Early Modern England and France”

 

Mary Trull, Assistant Professor of English, St. Olaf College
“Public Privacies: The Overheard Lament and Early Modern Intimacy”

 

Michael Ullyot, Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Toronto
“Henry, Prince of Wales: An Unabridged Literary Biography”

 

Maria Zytaruk, Lecturer in English, University of Toronto
“Trading Knowledge: Literary Innovation and Commercial Discourse c. 1620–1700”



Bookmark and Share   
 
     Copyright & Policies   |   Sitemap   |   Contact Us   |   About This Site
RSS   
 
  Address:
201 East Capitol Street, SE
Washington, DC 20003
Get directions »
    Hours:
PublicReading Room
Open 10am to 5pm8:45am to 4:45pm Monday through Friday
Monday through Saturday9am to noon and 1pm to 4:30pm Saturday

Closed all federal holidays
    Phone:
Main: 202 544 4600
Box Office: 202 544 7077
Fax: 202 544 4623