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2006-2007 Fellows

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2006-2007 Fellows



NEH Fellows

 

James J. Bono, Associate Professor of History and of Medicine, University at Buffalo, SUNY

“The Word of God and the Languages of Man: Technologies of the ‘Literal’ and  the Scientific Revolution”

 

Carole Levin,  Willa Cather Professor of History, University of Nebraska

“Dreaming the English Renaissance: Politics and Desires in Court and Culture”

 

Julian Yates, Associate Professor of English, University of Delaware

“Renaissance Organics”

 

Mellon Fellows

 

Paul Hammer, Lecturer in History, University of St. Andrews

“The Late Elizabethan Crisis: the Earl of Essex, Faction and the Politics of Royal Decline, 1598-1603”

 

Timothy Harris, Munro-Goodwin-Wilkinson Professor in European History, Brown University

“Prejudice: English Identities from the Reformation to the Enlightenment”

 

Short-term Fellows

 

Renzo Baldasso, Ph.D. candidate in Art History, Columbia University

“Ratdolt’s Figures: Visuality and Visual Thinking in Early Printed Books”

 

Joseph Bray, Lecturer in English, University of Sheffield

“Elizabeth Inchbald’s Reading”

 

Judith Buchanan, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies and English, University of York

“Shakespeare on Silent Film”

 

Claire Busse, Asst. Professor of English, La Salle University

“Divining Obedience: The Translation and Transmission of Psalm 127”

 

Ilias Chrissochoidis, Lecturer, Stanford University

“English Oratorio in 18th-century Britain”

 

Fernando Cioni, Lecturer in English, University of Florence

Variorum edition of Taming of the Shrew

 

Katherine Crawford, Asst. Professor of History, Vanderbilt University

“The Sexual Culture of the French Renaissance”

 

Holly Crocker, Asst. Professor of English, University of South Carolina

“John Foxe’s Chaucer: Reading the Aesthetics of Reform in Early Modern England”

 

Nicholas Fisher, Visiting Research Fellow, University of London

“The Preparation of a Bibliography of the Work of John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester (1647-80)”

 

Andrew Fleck, Asst. Professor of English, San Jose State

“The Dutch Device: English National Identity and the Image of the Dutch, 1588-1688”

 

Ian Harwood, Independent Scholar

The Folger Dowland Lute book (MS. V.b. 280)

 

Kimberly Hossain, Ph.D. candidate in History, The Johns Hopkins University

“Investigating the Inquisitor”

 

Margaret Hunt, Professor of History, Amherst College

“Gender and the Royal Navy: Maritime Communities and the British Military State, 1650-1720”

 

Sujata Iyengar, Assoc. Professor of English, University of Georgia

“Shakespeare’s Medical Language”

 

Nicholas D. Jackson, Visiting Instructor of History, Utica College

“Politics of Exile and Restoration, 1649-1660: Newcastle, Bramhall, Ormonde”

 

Phebe Jensen, Assoc. Professor of English, Utah State University

“Religion and Revelry in Shakespeare’s Festive World”

 

Sean Keilen, Asst. Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania

“The Classical Tradition in English Literature: The Friendship of the Ancients and the Moderns”

 

William Kerwin, Assoc. Professor of English, University of Missouri-Columbia

“City Satire: Encountering Renaissance London”

 

Susan Lamb, Assoc. Professor of Humanities, University of Toronto, Scarborough

“Captivating Gulliver: The Cultural Poetics of Travel, Its Texts, and Its Home Truths”

 

Elaine Leong, Lecturer, University of Leicester

“Reading for Cures”

 

Kevin McGinley, Asst. Professor of English, Fatih University, Instanbul

“The Drama of John Home (1722-1808): A Critical Reappraisal and Scholarly Edition”

 

Katherine Maynard, Asst. Professor of French, Washington College

“Adaptation of Martyrdom: Jean Crespin’s Martyrs in Agrippa d’Aubigne’s Les Tragiques

 

Katherine Newey, Professor of Drama, University of Birmingham

“Ruskin, Shakespeare, and Gender”

 

Philip Oldfield, Librarian, University of Toronto

“British Armorial Bookbindings”

 

Ben Robertson, Asst. Professor of English, Troy University

“The Pocketbook Diaries of Elizabeth Inchbald”

 

Alec Ryrie, Senior Lecturer in History, University of Birmingham

“The Social Shape of Protestant Piety in Early Modern England”

 

Jonathan Sachs, Asst. Professor of English, Concordia University

“Romantic Antiquity: Rome in the Romantic Imagination, 1789-1832”

 

James Schiffer, Professor of English, Northern Michigan University

New Variorum Twelfth Night; essay collection

 

Jyotsna Singh, Assoc. Professor of English, Michigan State University

“Trading Gifts: Economies of Exchange in Early Modern Colonial Encounters”

 

Monika Smialkowska, Research Fellow in Poetry and Drama, Doncaster College

“A Critical Examination of Community Masques Staged for the American Celebration of the Shakespeare Tercentenary”

 

Alycia Smith-Howard, Asst. Professor of Arts and Humanities, New York University

“How Like a Goddess: Women Reshaping ‘Shakespeare’”

 

Michael Steppat, Professor of English, University of Bayreuth

New Variorum edition of The Merry Wives of Windsor

 

Stephen Taylor, Reader in 18th-Century History, University of Reading

“Newsletters, Newspaper, and New Networks”

 

Patrick Tuite, Asst. Professor of Drama, Catholic University

“Theatre of Crisis: the Performance of Power in the Kingdom of Ireland, 1641-1691”

 

Susan Wabuda, Assoc. Professor of History, Fordham University

“Latin Polemical Writings and Latimer’s Library”

 

Brian Weiser, Assistant Professor of History, Metropolitan State College of Denver

“Rulers and Projectors: Economic Thought in the Stuart Era”

 

Travis D. Williams, Ph.D. candidate in English, University of California, Berkeley

Ethos and Enargeia: Literary and Rhetorical Strategies of Early Modern Mathematics”

 



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