Monday, March 9th: Joseph Loewenstein and Anupam Basu on Spenser and Historical Stylometrics

Please join the Renaissance Workshop and the Digital Humanities Forum as
Joseph Loewenstein, Professor of English, and Anupam BasuFellow in Digital Humanities, Washington University in Saint Louis,
present their paper: “Spenser’s Spell: Archaism and Historical Stylometrics”
MONDAY 9 MARCH
5PM
Rosenwald 405
(Refreshments will be served.) 
The paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to
the Renaissance Workshop mailing list, and will be available for download in the post above.
This event is generously sponsored by the Nicholson Center for British Studies
If you would like to join our e-mail list, please visit https://lists.uchicago.edu/web/subscribe/renshop/. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Questions, requests, or concerns may be directed to  Katia Fowler (kfowler@uchicago.edu) or Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu).

Monday, February 16th: Richard Strier on Ideologies of Style in the English Renaissance

Please join the Renaissance Workshop and the Poetry and Poetics Workshop
NEXT Monday, February 16th, when
Richard Strier
Sulzberger Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus
Department of English, Divinity School
University of Chicago
presents the paper:
Paleness versus Eloquence: the Ideologies of Style in the English Renaissance
MONDAY 16 FEBRUARY
4:30 PM
Rosenwald 405
 The paper, to be read in advance,will be distributed to the Renaissance Workshop mailing list, and is available for download in the post above. Light refreshments will be served. Please note the unusual time of this event.
If you would like to join our e-mail list, please visit https://lists.uchicago.edu/web/subscribe/renshop/. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Questions, requests, or concerns may be directed to  Katia Fowler (kfowler@uchicago.edu) or Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu).

February 9th: Philip Goldfarb on Setting and Politics in Jonson’s Catiline

Please join the Renaissance Workshop
NEXT Monday, February 9th, when
Philip Goldfarb
PhD Candidate, English
University of Chicago
presents the conclusion of his dissertation:
What Makes Shakespeare Special?: Politics and Setting in Jonson’s Catiline
MONDAY 9 FEBRUARY
5PM
Rosenwald 405
(Refreshments will be served.) 
The paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to
the Renaissance Workshop mailing list, and is available for download in the post above.
If you would like to join our e-mail list, please visit https://lists.uchicago.edu/web/subscribe/renshop/. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Questions, requests, or concerns may be directed to  Katia Fowler (kfowler@uchicago.edu) or Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu). The accompanying image is taken from The Nuremberg Chronicle (1493).

January 26th: Sarah Kunjummen on Labor and Consumption in Lucy Hutchinson’s Order and Disorder

Please join the Renaissance Workshop 
THIS Monday, January 26th, when
 
Sarah Kunjummen
PhD Student 
Department of English Literature
presents a project in progress:
“Self-supply Springs”: Labor, Circulation and Desire in Lucy Hutchinson’s Order and Disorder
MONDAY 26 JANUARY
5PM
Rosenwald 405
 
The paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to
the Renaissance Workshop mailing list, and is available for download in the post above.
To be added to our list or to request copies of the papers directly, 
please contact Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu).
We are committed to making our workshop accessible to persons with disabilities. Please contact the workshop coordinators Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu) and Katia Fowler (kfowler@uchicago.edu) with any questions or concerns. The events announced here are free and open to the public.

December 1: Kimberly Johnson on Visual Perspective and the Development of Renaissance Lyric

Please join the Renaissance Workshop
THIS Monday, December 1st, when
Kimberly Johnson
Professor of English Literature,
at Brigham Young University
presents a project in progress:
Inventions Fine: Linear Perspective and the Renaissance Lyric
MONDAY 1 DECEMBER
5PM
Rosenwald 405
(Refreshments will be served.) 
The paper, to be read in advance, will be distributed to
the Renaissance Workshop mailing list, and is available for download in the post above.
If you would like to join our e-mail list, please visit https://lists.uchicago.edu/web/subscribe/renshop/. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Questions, requests, or concerns may be directed to  Katia Fowler (kfowler@uchicago.edu) or Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu). To receive a copy of the paper directly, please contact Sarah Kunjummen (kunjummen@uchicago.edu).