Fab PhD scholarship on marginalia available with lots of funding built in for archival research and conferences. Join me and the other great early modern scholars at the University of Newcastle.
https://t.co/t0Lx2n5w7v via @uni_newcastle
Right, back to the latest issue of @ParergonJournal. We also have a cluster of articles on the aesthetics of medieval and early modern poetry. Check out Jane Vaughan's introduction: we have Chaucer, Shakespeare, Marlowe, Chapman, and Donne here...
https://t.co/7ay9g4Bf86
Now, what else do we have from Parergon vol 41.1? A special article cluster on Renaissance art and science! In her introduction to the cluster, @andrea_bubenik looks at the fuzzy boundary between art and science in early modern thought.
https://t.co/p0MQulrZHh
It's here friends! The latest issue of Parergon - an open issue with something for everyone: Orderic Vitalis, Spenser, Chinese translations of Chaucer, plus special clusters of articles on Renaissance art & science and medieval and early modern poetry.
https://t.co/CFbVb4ErRD
The Oxford History of Poetry, Vol. 5: Seventeenth-Century British Poetry has just been published, and features not one but two of the scholars at @English_ANU: @rossmith11 on Lady Mary Wroth, and @UnaMcIlvenna on songs, ballads, and broadsides! Order now:
https://t.co/KDJCqzokN8
A new PhD Scholarship offered for Dr Una McIIvenna's Future Fellowship project, 'Singing the News: Ballads as News Media in Europe and Australia 1550-1920', is now open for applications: https://t.co/0SXOvVhNUq
@UnaMcIlvenna@calc_anu
You were asking for a bumper Parergon issue of 13 articles - including special clusters on renaissance art and science, and medieval poetry - and nearly two dozen reviews? Well it's an oddly specific request, but we've got you covered...
CEMS HDR candidate Emma Rayner has just been approved for a PhD award for her thesis "Fashioning Worth, Fashioning Worlds: Early Modern Women and Civil Discourses". Congratulations Emma from everyone at CEMS!
CEMS director Prof Rosalind Smith @rossmith11 and CEMS HDRs Hannah Upton @hannahmupton and Julia Rodwell @JuliaRodwell3 will be speaking on 7 June at @BirkbeckUoL for a one-day conference, Learning from Early Modern Books https://t.co/sippqql16i
This reader was apparently not super interested in the instructions on the sacraments in Henry VIII's "King's Book" (1543). Newberry library Case c 6526.61. #marginalia