author,Ways of the World: Theater and Cosmopolitanism in the Restoration (Cornell, 2020 ); Ed, Restoration Jrnl; UMD English/Faculty Affairs; opinions own
Job opening at the University of Maryland for TerrapinSTRONG Program Manager in the Office of Diversity and Inclusion; spread the word!
https://t.co/SmdQVNKfNu
Job posting: UVA's English Department is participating in the Rising Scholars Postdoctoral Fellowship program: an excellent 2-year post-doc. More information here: https://t.co/hBBzc8uhj3. Please share widely. Questions? hit me up.
Very pleased to support @LauraRosenthal's book launch this morning; looking forward to reading her take on Restoration cosmopolitanism https://t.co/ffweckRvKu
Tomorrow: Join the book launch for @LauraRosenthal WAYS OF THE WORLD. Purchase Ways of the World ahead of this book launch for 30% off the list price through @CornellPress. Use the promo code 09FLYER at checkout.
RSVP + details here: https://t.co/qumQHoa0GI
Hello Restoration fans! Our editor @LauraRosenthal’s latest book *Ways of the World* was recently published! It is a great read for those of you who work with Restoration theater.
Here is a link to the Zoom book launch, hosted by @UMDEnglish on March 2nd: https://t.co/2VhPlu8xBh
“ShantyTok” recently offered fun & critical engagement! Jessica Floyd (@JessMFloyd1) explores the crosscurrents between the sea chantey and the Restoration ballad genre, as well as issues of dating and origin within the two oral traditions. Read here! https://t.co/ZxPgDbSIBs
Rebecca Ferguson reconsiders the subjects of Pope’s early verse satires “Phryne” and “Artimesia,” as well as Pope’s decision to publish them so long after he had written them. So, “whom did he mean”? Read here! https://t.co/obWZV6cmWi (hints in the images 😉)
In “Beyond Woolf’s Falling Flowers: Aphra Behn’s Poetry among the Edwardians,” Daniel J. Ennis explores Virginia Woolf’s praise of Behn as a poet & professional writer alongside questions of anthologization in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Read here! https://t.co/WKDxyKCCrU
Daniel Cook’s “Swift after Cowley” considers in depth the influence of Cowley’s poetry on Swift’s early odes. While others have posited Swift mocked Restoration poetry, Cook argues Swift’s experimentation was “at once dismissive and informed.” Read here! https://t.co/sbrEJ9yKX4
Our latest issue is online via Project Muse: https://t.co/5UbKc1xNFA featuring scholarship by Daniel J. Ennis, Daniel Cook (@drdanielcook), Rebecca Ferguson, Jessica Floyd (@JessMFloyd1), and a book review by Hope Frew-Costa and SCP by Dylan P. Lewis (@IAmDylanLewis)!
Are you finishing up an essay or revising a seminar paper related to the Restoration (generously defined)? Feeling good about it? Send it to us at [email protected]!