Early modern religion/censorship/cultural and intellectual history. Post-doc at KU Leuven. Previously research fellow @CaiusCollege. Social media @_EMoDiR_
And it’s out! My book is now available online:
https://t.co/fMoOETOuZO
From the history of knowledge to the practice of censorship, the Republic of Letters, textual criticism, and much else(!), it tells a new story about the Old Testament in post-Reformation Europe.
Now out in Open Access, my new article on "Everyday Erudition: John Locke, the Bible and the Challenge of Early Modern Biblical Scholarship."
Link below.
Now out in Open Access, my new article on "Everyday Erudition: John Locke, the Bible and the Challenge of Early Modern Biblical Scholarship."
Link below.
The first academic article I ever read was in The Historical Journal, so it’s particularly special to have found a place in its pages with this new piece--now out in open access.
The first academic article I ever read was in The Historical Journal, so it’s particularly special to have found a place in its pages with this new piece--now out in open access.
Now out: the EMoDiR Newsletter for June 2025, compiled by @martinamampy and Francesco Quatrini!
Check it out for news on new publications, upcoming events, scholarships, cfps and much much more!
Link below
I’ll be launching my book The Limits of Erudition in Cambridge on 2 May 2025 with Simon Ditchfield. All very much welcome, whether in person or online! For further details see the poster attached and to register for Zoom see below.
I’ll be launching my book The Limits of Erudition in Cambridge on 2 May 2025 with Simon Ditchfield. All very much welcome, whether in person or online! For further details see the poster attached and to register for Zoom see below.
It’s one week to go until the @RSAorg Annual Meeting in Boston! We’ll be there with a panoply of EMoDiR panels, organised by Matteo Al Kalak and @martinamampy.
We can’t wait to see you!
#RenTwitter#RenSA25#RSABoston25
Now out: the EMoDiR Newsletter for March 2025, compiled by @martinamampy and Francesco Quatrini!
Check it out for news on new publications, upcoming events, scholarships, cfps and much much more!
Link below.
The Jesuit Studies Café (@IAJSBC) is back for Spring 2025!
Starting next week you can (virtually) attend a series of conversations with prominent scholars and their recent books, starting with Barton T. Geger.
See this flyer, or the link below.
New publication!
Kirsten Macfarlane’s Lay Learning and the Bible in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World (Oxford, 2024) offers an alternative account of early modern popular religion by reconstructing an unstudied community of c17th puritan immigrants to North America.
Drawing on a mass of archival sources, Timothy Twining reconstructs the religious, cultural, and institutional contexts in which the text of the Old Testament was considered and contested throughout post-Reformation Europe.
https://t.co/WlqTI9kF7m
New Special Issue of Church History and Religious Culture: "Religious Practices, Boundaries, and Institutions: Historiographical Debates and New Perspectives in Early Modern Italian History."
Ed. by Sabina Pavone and @stefanovil
Link below (includes OA).
#Twitterstorians
And it’s out! My book is now available online:
https://t.co/fMoOETOuZO
From the history of knowledge to the practice of censorship, the Republic of Letters, textual criticism, and much else(!), it tells a new story about the Old Testament in post-Reformation Europe.
And it’s out! My book is now available online:
https://t.co/fMoOETOuZO
From the history of knowledge to the practice of censorship, the Republic of Letters, textual criticism, and much else(!), it tells a new story about the Old Testament in post-Reformation Europe.