Page 3 of 4Results 21 to 30 of 34, 13 November 2015 - 17 January 2017
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CEMS Phd success
Congratulations are due to CEMS student Julia Kotzur (English) who passed her viva just before Christmas and was awarded her phd subject to minor corrections. Julia's thesis investigated sacramental eating and Galenic humouralism in the drama of Shakespeare and Jonson and was supervised by Dr Thomas Rist.
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Shakespeare Week
A series of event to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death
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Call for Papers: 'What legacy shall I bequeath to thee?' - Shakespeare in the Context of his Time
An Interdisciplinary Graduate and Early Career Symposium on 22 October 2016 - Call for Papers
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New CEMS Publication. Women and Epistolary Agency in Early Modern Culture, 1450 1690
A new collection of essays has been published by Routledge edited by CEMS Co-Director Andrew Gordon, and James Daybell (plymouth). Entitled Women and Epistolary Agency in Early Modern Culture, 1450-1690, the collection features studies of women letter writers, and of the roles of women in letter-writing codes, practices and rhetoric....
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New CEMS publication. Cultures of Correspondence in Early Modern Britain
CEMS is happy to announce the publication of Cultures of Correspondence in Early Modern Britain edited by CEMS Co-director Andrew Gordon, and James Daybell. Published by University of Pennsylvania Press in the Material Texts series (Gen. eds. Roger Chartier and Peter Stallybrass), the volume brings together an international interdisciplinary team of scholars...
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New CEMS Publication!
Announcing the new publication of a collaborative volume on the Aberdonian polymath Duncan Liddel (1561-1613).
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Volume on Duncan Liddel (1561-1613) published with Brill
Omodeo, Pietro (ed.), with collab. with Karin Friedrich, Duncan Liddel (1561-1613). Networks of Polymathy and the Northern European Renaissance (Leiden: Brill, 2016)
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Grammar Wars of the 1500s
New publication by Rachel McGregor
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New Publication
Sandra Cardarelli, Emily-Jane Anderson and John Richards eds. Art and Identity: Visual Culture, Politics and Religion in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars 2012).
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Training week-end for Postgraduate Students at the Burn at Edzell
This is an opportunity to meet postgraduates and staff from St Andrews University's Centre for Reformation Studies and the Institute for the History of the Book.