The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 12.2336  Friday, 12 October 2001

From:           Sean Lawrence <This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.>
Date:           Thursday, 11 Oct 2001 19:21:13 -0700
Subject:        Latest Issue of EMLS

Early Modern Literary Studies is pleased to announce the launch of its
September issue, available free online at
http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/emlshome.html  The table of contents is below.

Articles:

Greenaway's Books. [1] Steven Marx, Cal Poly University Time for the
Plebs in Julius Caesar. [2] Christopher Holmes, McGill University
Othello, the Baroque, and Religious Mentalities. [3] Anthony Gilbert,
Lancaster University Performance, Subjectivity and Slander in Hamlet and
Much Ado About Nothing. [4] Adam Piette, University of Glasgow

Note:

Ovid's Rivers and the Naming of Milton's Lycidas. [5] Eric C. Brown,
Harvard University. Idealist and Materialist Interpretations of BL
Harley  7368, the Sir Thomas More Manuscript. [6] Gabriel Egan, Globe
Education (Shakespeare's Globe) and King's College, London.

Reviews

Paul Budra. A Mirror for Magistrates and the de casibus Tradition.
Toronto, Buffalo, London: U of Toronto P, 2000. [7] Dermot Cavanagh,
Northumbria University.

John Lee. Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' and the Controversies of Self. Oxford:
Clarendon P, 2000. [8] Roger Starling, University of Warwick.

Kenneth Borris. Allegory and Epic in English Renaissance Literature:
Heroic Form in Sidney, Spenser, and Milton. Cambridge: Cambridge UP,
2000. [9] Mary R. Bowman, University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point.

Deborah Aldrich Larson. The Verse Miscellany of Constance Aston Fowler:
A Diplomatic Edition. Tempe: Renaissance English Text Society, 2000.
[10] Marie-Louise Coolahan, National University of Ireland, Galway.

Alan Rudrum, Joseph Black, and Holly Faith Nelson, eds. The Broadview
Anthology of Seventeenth-Century Verse and Prose. Peterborough, Ont.:
Broadview, 2000.  [11] Robert Appelbaum, University of San Diego.

Lady Mary Wroth. The Second Part of the Countess  of Montgomery's
Urania. Ed. Josephine A. Roberts; completed by Suzanne Gossett and Janel
Mueller. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies,
1999. [12]. Bernadette Andrea, University of Texas at San Antonio.

Alison Adams, Stephen Rawles, and Alison Saunders. A Bibliography of
French Emblem Books of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Travaux
d'Humanisme et Renaissance. Vol. CCCXXXI. Geneva: Droz, 1999. [13] David
Graham, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's.

Marc Berley. After the Heavenly Song: English Poetry and the Aspiration
to Song. Pittsburgh: Duquesne UP, 2000.  [14] Hannibal Hamlin, The Ohio
State University, Mansfield.

Jean E. Howard and Scott Cutler Shershow, eds. Marxist Shakespeares.
Accents on Shakespeare.&nbsp; Terry Hawkes, gen. ed. London: Routledge,
2001. [15] Gabriel Egan, Globe Education (Shakespeare's Globe) and
King's College, London.

Theatre Reviews

Love's Labour's Lost.  [16] Lisa Hopkins, Sheffield Hallam University.

AngliaShax Summer 2001. [17] Michael Grosvenor Myer.

The Tragedy of Hamlet. [18] Joseph Tate, University of Washington.

Lisa Hopkins
Reader in English, Sheffield Hallam University
School of Cultural Studies, Sheffield Hallam University, Collegiate
Crescent
Campus, Sheffield, S10 2BP, U.K.
Editor, Early Modern Literary Studies:
http://purl.oclc.org/emls/emlshome.html
Teaching and research pages:
http://www.shu.ac.uk/schools/cs/teaching/lh/index.htm

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