MONDAY, May 3rd, Timothy Harrison, Ellen MacKay, Noémie Ndiaye, Joshua Scodel, and Richard Strier Faculty Roundtable

Please join the Renaissance Workshop
MONDAY, May 3rd for
A Faculty Roundtable Discussion on “Research Practices in Early Modern English Literary Studies” featuring
Timothy Harrison
Randy L. and Melvin R. Berlin Assistant Professor, of Renaissance and Early Modern English Literature, University of Chicago
Ellen MacKay
Associate Professor, English and TAPS, University of Chicago

Noémie Ndiaye
Assistant Professor, English, University of Chicago

Joshua Scodel
Helen A. Regenstein Professor, English, University of Chicago

Richard Strier
Frank L. Sulzberger Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, English, University of Chicago

MONDAY, May 3rd
5:00pm-6:30pm
*note the adjusted time for Spring Quarter
Zoom Information
Meeting ID: 983 1306 2134
 Passcode: 040645

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 Sarah-Gray Lesley (sglesley@uchicago.edu).

Image: “The Wedding Feast,” Franz Verbeek, c. 16th century

MONDAY, April 19th, Ryan Campagna, “‘I smell the blood of a British man’: Folklore, the Scent of Race, and the Precarious ‘Nothing’ of Whiteness in King Lear”

Please join the Renaissance Workshop

MONDAY, April 19th, when

Ryan Campagna

PhD Candidate, English

University of Chicago

presents the paper

 

“‘I smell the blood of a British man’: Folklore, the Scent of Race, and the Precarious ‘Nothing’ of Whiteness in King Lear

MONDAY, April 19th

5:00-6:30pm

*note the adjusted time for Spring Quarter

Zoom Information:

https://uchicago.zoom.us/j/96451886240?pwd=aVZkVFVoSGU2eDM4T2YxVEVlaitaUT09

Meeting ID: 964 5188 6240

Passcode: 862610

This paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to the Renaissance Workshop mailing list and is available on our website with the password “scent”.

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 Sarah-Gray Lesley (sglesley@uchicago.edu).

Image: “Act Three Scene Four of King Lear,” John Yunge Bateman (from Curwen Press Edition of King Lear), 1930.