Nicholas Bellinson on “Does Portia Cheat? and other questions about the casket trial in The Merchant of Venice”

Please join the Renaissance Workshop
Monday, April 27, when

Nicholas Bellinson
PhD Candidate, Social Thought
University of Chicago
presents the paper:

“Does Portia Cheat? and other questions about the casket trial in The Merchant of Venice

MONDAY, April 27
4:30-6:00pm
Zoom: https://uchicago.zoom.us/j/97346504113

The paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to the Renaissance Workshop mailing list and is available with a password in the post below.

If you would like to join our mailing list, please click here. We are committed to making our workshop accessible to all persons. Questions, requests, and/or concerns should be directed to Ryan Campagna (rcampagna@uchicago.edu) or Michal Zechariah (michalz@uchicago.edu).

Image: The Virgin with the Scales. Master of the Virgin with the Scales, 1510.

MONDAY, April 13th: Sarah-Gray Lesley, “”How to Read a Woman-Hater: Marginalia and Joseph Swetnam’s Araignment of Lewde, idle, froward and vnconstant women (1615)”

File:The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women ...Please join the Renaissance Workshop
Monday, April 13th, when

Sarah-Gray Lesley
PhD student, English
University of Chicago
presents the paper:

“How to Read a Woman-Hater: Marginalia and Joseph Swetnam’s Araignment of Lewde, idle, froward and vnconstant women (1615)”
MONDAY, April 13th
4:30-6:00pm
(Zoom Meeting Information Below)

The paper, to be read in advance, has been distributed to the Renaissance Workshop mailing list and is available on our website with the password in the post above.

Zoom Meeting Information:
Meeting ID: 617 031 251
Password: 071655

If you would like to join our mailing list, please click here. We are committed to making our workshop accessible to all persons. Questions, requests, and/or concerns should be directed to Ryan Campagna (rcampagna@uchicago.edu) or Michal Zechariah (michalz@uchicago.edu).

Image: Cover page of the 1615 edition of Joseph Swetnam’s The Araignment of Lewde, idle, forward and vnconstant women.