Chuffed that my (first!) article is now out in
@English_Jnl. So, if you want to know what connects rivalrous printers, Thomas Nashe, and talking cats, then do have a read! 1/3
https://t.co/zGYcvJRwHW
Who was Martin Marprelate, seditious pamphleteer and enemy of the Elizabethan Church and state? And, more importantly, how could he be stopped?
🔒 Matt Ryan’s feature from the new issue is available in the archive
https://t.co/bXEvktlj3M
Chuffed that my (first!) article is now out in
@English_Jnl. So, if you want to know what connects rivalrous printers, Thomas Nashe, and talking cats, then do have a read! 1/3
https://t.co/zGYcvJRwHW
@EarlyModernPhD@English_Jnl Hi Michelle - thanks! Your article on Nashe, Danter, and ballads was great too. Really enjoyed it! My thesis has a chapter on the ways in which freelance writers discuss networking, and your article gets a mention!
It's part of a special edition on precarity, and appears alongside some brilliant work. Huge thanks to the wonderful editors, Archie Cornish, Cathy Shrank, and @KateDeRycker. Huge congrats on a brilliant volume of work.
2/3
@theOrientway It was a great game. We just about edged it, but you've had a brilliant season. I hope you end up in the playoffs (with us). Good luck for the run-in. 👍
Causes of the British Civil Wars: royalists versus parliamentarians
You're Dead to Me
Sat 10:00
@BBCRadio4
@greg_jenner is joined in 17th-century England by Dr @SocialHistoryOx and @Toussaint_X to learn about King Charles I and the British Civil Wars.
https://t.co/VLKHYWdpNX
I helped research this episode of @BBCRadio4's #YoureDeadtoMe on the British Civil Wars. If you’re into military blunders, wobbly vicars, and shouty lads with beards, then this is for you!
https://t.co/FnHufKdQPk
Shakespeare: Inspired or Imitator?
Matt Ryan delves into Darren Freebury-Jones' analysis of Shakespeare's literary connections. Did he borrow or brilliantly adapt?
https://t.co/hjhwzVQOl4
#history#ECR#Postgrad#twitterstorians
Had a blast reviewing 'Shakespeare’s Borrowed Feathers' by the excellent @Freeburian for @HistoryEpoch. It's a brilliant read.
Words here: https://t.co/WplodMxIdm
Issue 18 - Gender & Sexuality is now live!
Read it and over four years of content here:
[https://t.co/CMj8vAUGB0]
#history#ECR#Postgrad#twitterstorians
🧐I had great fun digging into the curious case of Edward Blount for @historyinpublic. If you're into family feuds and/or vanishing booksellers: have a gander!
Our latest post, by Matt Ryan (@Heggledepeg) investigates why Edward Blount, the publisher of Shakespeare's First Folio, suddenly disappeared from the historical record in the mid-1620s https://t.co/eL80DZjrWX