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Christopher Archibald
New College, University of Oxford
Events this person is speaking at:
Tuesday 1 June 2021 (6th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
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Positing Alternative Playworlds: The Case of The Winter's Tale & The Unremarkable Richard Crashaw? The Problem of Confessional Identity and Literary Form
Richard Bradshaw
(Hertford College, University of Oxford)
,
Christopher Archibald
(New College, University of Oxford)
Early Modern Graduate Forum
Events this person is organising:
Wednesday 4 May 2022 (2nd Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'Rethinking the Edwardian Succession'
Professor Paulina Kewes
(Jesus College, Oxford)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 11 May 2022 (3rd Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'Sermons and Ceremonies in Civil War Exeter'
Dr Niall Allsopp
(University of Exeter)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 18 May 2022 (4th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'Novel Representations of Tudor History'
Dr Alexander Samson
(University College London)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 25 May 2022 (5th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'Travelling Players and Continental Adaptations of English Drama: The Case of Tito Andronico (1620)'
Dr Maria Shmygol
(National University of Ireland Galway)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 1 June 2022 (6th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'"It was Greek to me": (Not) Quoting Phoenician Women'
Dr Carla Suthren
(University College London)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 8 June 2022 (7th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
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Friendship and Philosophy in the Circle of Anne Conway
Please note, this week's seminar will be ONLINE only. Please email daniel.haywood@sjc.ox.ac.uk for the Teams link.
Dr Michael Edwards
(Jesus College, University of Cambridge)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar
Wednesday 15 June 2022 (8th Week, Trinity Term)
17:15
-
'Between Official Record and Gonzo Journalism: Parliamentary Diaries as a Transnational Genre in Seventeenth-Century Europe'
Dr Jim van der Meulen
(University of Oxford)
Literature and History in Early Modern Britain Seminar