And yet another post for "Just because it's Tuesday." #18thcentury
Please do #readecf on Project MUSE.
Fictions of Obligation: Contract and Romance in Margaret Cavendish and Aphra Behn, by Eun Kyung Min https://t.co/dqHk01lJRs
Dr. Sonu Shiva is a Professor of English at Dungar College, Bikaner, India. She has 29 years of teaching and research experience. She is a film critic and has traveled to Europe and Southeast Asia to deliver lectures.
Hello Filmmakers, Next deadline is around the corner. Are you ready to make your mark?
Don't miss out on your chance to shine! Submit your films via @FilmFree before March 13, 2024. Let your creativity ignite the screen!
A reclusive woman's carefully constructed life shatters when a blood covered child runs out of the woods, claiming her mother is trying to kill her. She assumes a long lost motherly roll to protect the girl, but discovers other things lurking in the dark, trying to get in.
The People of Print: Seventeenth Century England, edited by Drs Rachel Stenner (@SussexCEMMS), Kaley Kramer (@SheffHallamEng) & my good self, has just been published by @CUPAcademic and you can read it for FREE for the next two weeks using this link:
https://t.co/4ARFWDpasw
The Online Olios are back once again! “Early Modern Women Writers + Translation"
Chair: Karen Griscom (Indiana University of Pennsylvania)
Time: Saturday January 28, 1-3pm EST, 6-8PM GMT
To Register: https://t.co/bvjB7mPeXN
@ https://t.co/eoe07gXOTx
Congratulations to Claire Gheeraert-Graffeuille for the first monograph on Lucy Hutchinson, and the first study to approach the Memoirs not only through history but through form, analyzing for the first time the complex digressive structure. A milestone!
In 1625, Pierre Dumonstier met painter Artemisia Gentileschi in Rome and made a drawning of her hand, delicately holding a brush. In his inscription, Dumonstier writes that Gentileschi's hands are worthier than those of a goddess because of their skill: https://t.co/RdQBcOoFIk
Head of a young man, an amazing study by Michaelina Wautiers. It used to be attributed to Jacob van Oost, whose day is today, so I'm popping it up here with kudos to her!
Wonderful tribute to a teacher: young Sofonisba Anguissola paints herself being created by Bernardino Campi -- yet at same time, she is of course creating him! Today is her day.
Chess game, 1555: the artist's three sisters & their nurse. Mischievous youngest, calm & knowing eldest, middle who always gets fooled by them. Painted by Sofonisba Anguissola, whose day is today.
She was always THE woman. Looking right at you from 1590: Infanta Catalina Micaela (almost surely), painted by Sofonisba Anguissola (probably). Surely one of the greatest renaissance portraits.
#workshop SCREENPLAY TABLE READ
Studio B @filmhuisdenhaag
Sunday 13 November 2022 12:00 to 12:45
Presenters: @JamesFitzmauri1@b_malley, Willemijn Mignot, Sarif Tribou, Rogier van Beeck Calkoen, Mike Pasarella
https://t.co/yx8zmszTB0
Free ticket - link in bio
#IFFTheHague
Our collection of essays, Authorizing Early Modern European Women, From Biography to Biofiction, is a 2022 Co-Honorable mention in the SSEMWG prize category Collaborative Projects. Thanks again to all contributors.
Credit to springer who did in the end send me a hard copy for review of mihoko Suzuki’s new book; as a long time fan of her work I’m really looking forward to this.