Booking and details
Dates Thu, May 14, 2026 at 4:30pm
Venue Great Hall
Tickets Free; no ticket required
Linguistic intersections between Gullah-Geechee and Shakespearean English. Captivity and Iroquois architecture in Northeast America.
Interested? Join us for the next Folger Salon.
About Folger Salon
Learn about research happening at the Folger in real time! Each month, Folger Institute scholar and artist fellows will share their most exciting finds and thought-provoking challenges, followed by casual open conversation. Arrive early to purchase food and drink from the Folger café, Quill & Crumb.
This is a free event. Seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Speakers
Nakeisha Daniel
2025-26 Long-term Public Humanities Fellow
Linguistic Hierarchies: Gullah-Geechee x Shakespearean English (What Language Remembers)
What Language Remembers is an interdisciplinary exploration of the historical, performative, and linguistic intersections between Gullah-Geechee and Shakespearean English, aimed at elevating the Gullah-Geechee tradition through a critical lens. Drawing on historical research, linguistic and phonetic analysis, and storytelling practices, the project highlights how both systems—one shaped by the survival strategies of enslaved Africans, the other by the literary ambitions of Renaissance England – use rhythm, tone, and narrative to transmit identity, memory, and resistance.
JaMeeka Holloway
2025-26 Long-term Public Humanities Fellow
Linguistic Hierarchies: Gullah-Geechee x Shakespearean English (What Language Remembers)
What Language Remembers is an interdisciplinary exploration of the historical, performative, and linguistic intersections between Gullah-Geechee and Shakespearean English, aimed at elevating the Gullah-Geechee tradition through a critical lens. Drawing on historical research, linguistic and phonetic analysis, and storytelling practices, the project highlights how both systems—one shaped by the survival strategies of enslaved Africans, the other by the literary ambitions of Renaissance England – use rhythm, tone, and narrative to transmit identity, memory, and resistance.
Lorenzo Gatta
2025-26 Short-term Fellow
ASECS-Folger Institute Fellow
Iroquois Architecture and the Experience of Captivity in Northeast America, 1650 – 1775
About Folger Institute
The Folger Institute is a center for early modern research at the Folger Shakespeare Library that brings public audiences together with researchers to explore the cultures and legacies of the early modern world. Learn more.
See what our fellows are researching
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Artistic Research Fellow, Kate Nartker, transforms weave drafts from one of our recipe books into cloth and film.
The Untold History of Black Africans in Renaissance Europe
In his groundbreaking documentary, We Were Here, Folger Fellow Fred Kuwornu shares the diverse African presence in Renaissance Europe—princes, ambassadors, saints, artists, scholars, and knights—all revealed through art from the period.
Artist Dominick Porras Reconstructs Classical Narratives of the Americas
Porras, a Folger Artist Fellow, shares what inspired him, from the Folger collection to Indigenous futurism, in the creation of his new media work, de Bry’s Slipstream.
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