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SHAKSPER 2005: Enfants Terribles II
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@shaksper.net) Date: 09/29/05
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 16.1651 Thursday, 29 September 2005 From: Gary Taylor <gtaylor@english.fsu.edu > Date: Mon 9/26/2005 10:17 PM Subject: Enfants Terribles II Last October, when I announced plans for a symposium featuring six scholars under 40 who work primarily on Renaissance drama, I promised to announce a second symposium featuring six scholars under 40 who work primarily outside drama. The promised symposium, "Renaissance Poetry and Prose: The Future of the Past", will take place on December 9-10; the six speakers and their paper titles are listed below, along with two essays or book chapters they have chosen as representative of their best work. This symposium is being funded by the English Department at Florida State University; it celebrates the expansion of Renaissance studies here at Florida State, where this year I and Celia R. Daileader have joined the already-fantastic four of Bruce Boehrer, James O'Rourke, Daniel Vitkus, and Nancy Warren. Each of the six speakers will be introduced by one of the six early modernists here. My original search (under the banner "Enfants Terribles") was guided by more than a hundred nominations I received from scholars around the world. (All nominated scholars are listed at the bottom of this message.) I wish I could give a dozen such symposiums, because there are at least another sixty younger scholars out there I would like to invite. The six who will be speaking at Florida State on December 9-10 are all extraordinarily talented intellectuals who, in my never-humble but often-humbled opinion, are shaping the future of the field. In alphabetical order, the speakers and their paper titles are: JEFF DOLVEN (Princeton), "Communities of Style". Dolven has just completed a book on the transformations of literary didacticism during the English educational revolution, TALES OUT OF SCHOOL, and is currently starting a new project on lyric style. (1) "Spenser's Sense of Poetic Justice", Raritan 21 (2001), 127-40 (2) "When to Stop Reading The Faerie Queene", in Never Again Would Birds' Song Be the Same: New Essays in Poetry and Poetics, Renaissance to Modern, ed. Jennifer Lewin (Beineke Library, 2002) BRUCE HOLSINGER (Virginia), "The Work of God: Liturgical Poetics from Caedmon to Cranmer". Holsinger is the author of a new book on the critical role of premodernity in shaping the twentieth-century French avant-garde and is engaged in a long-term project on liturgy from the Anglo-Saxon period through the Reformation. (1) "Lollard Ekphrasis: Situated Aesthetics and Literary History,' from a volume of JMEMS (2005) responding to James Simpson's Reform and Cultural Revolution (the Medieval volume of the new Oxford English Literary History) (2) "The Four Senses of Roland Barthes," from a book coming out with University of Chicago Press any minute now, The Premodern Condition: Medievalism and the Making of Theory CATHY SHRANK (Sheffield), "Tudor Dialogue and the Garrulity of Sixteenth-Century Literary Culture". Shrank does literary, historical and sociolinguistic work on the reclamation of sixteenth-century literature and the Renaissance canon. (1) 'Rhetorical constructions of a national community: the role of the King's English in mid-Tudor writing', in Alexandra Shepard and Phil Withington (eds), Communities in Early Modern England (Manchester University Press, 2000). (2) "Andrew Borde: Authorship and Identity in Reformation England"', Ch. 1 of her book Writing the Nation in Reformation England, 1530-1580 (OUP, 2004) RAMIE TARGOFF (Brandeis), "Donne's Little Worlds". Targoff focuses on the intersections between religious practice and literary form. (1)"The Performance of Prayer: Sincerity and Theatricality in Early Modern England", Representations 60 (Fall 1997) (2) "Facing Death", in The Cambridge Companion to John Donne (Cambridge UP, forthcoming 2005) HENRY TURNER (Wisconsin-Madison), "Toward an Analysis of the Early Modern Corporate Ego: The Case of Richard Hakluyt." Turner works on the relationship between the problem of form, materialism, and early scientific thought. (1) "Sir Philip Sidney and the Practical Imagination," Ch. 3 of his book The English Renaissance Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts (Oxford: OUP, 2006) (2) "Nashe's Red Herring: Epistemologies of the Commodity in Lenten Stuffe (1599)," ELH 68.3 (Winter, 2001): 529-561. JULIAN YATES (Delaware), "Stealing Shakespeare's Oranges". Yates works on agency and material culture. (1) "Rewriting the Renaissance Myth" Chapter 1 of his book Error, Misuse, Failure: Object Lessons from the English Renaissance (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003) (2) "Counting Sheep: Dolly does Utopia (Again)" Rhizomes 8 (2004) , 42 paragraphs at http://www.rhizomes.net/issue8/yates2.htm NOMINATED SCHOLARS Every one of the scholars nominated is deserving of attention; many received more than one nomination. In choosing speakers I excluded former students, former colleagues, scholars I already regard as personal friends, scholars I have already invited to give lectures in another context, scholars whose work too closely resembles the work of someone else I wanted to invite, and scholars who despite their youthful energy and appearance turned out to be over 40-and, of course, scholars whose genius my own intellectual limitations prevented me from appreciating properly. Philip Armstrong Crystal Bartolovich Susan Bennett Caroline Bicks Joseph Black Gina Bloom *Karen Britland Tanya Brolaski Douglas Brooks Regina Buccola Mark Thornton Burnett Shane Butler Bianca Calabesi Kate Chedzgoy Steven Cohen Bradin Cormack Katherine Craik Celia Daileader Mario DiGangi Lara Dodds Tobias Doring Katherine Eggert Gabriel Egan *Lukas Erne *Ewan Fernie Sonja Fielitz Joan Fitzpatrick Juliet Fleming Mary Floyd-Wilson Wes Folkerth Pierpaolo Frasinelli Tom Fulton Alex Gillespie Indira Ghose Heidi Braverman Hackel Jonathan Gil Harris Andrew Hartley David Hawkes David Hillman Pete Hinds Heather Hirschfield Jim Holstun Blair Hoxby Sujata Iyengar Nicholas Jones Rayna Kalas David Kathman Sean Keilen Dennis Kezar M.J. Kidnie Bernhard Klein Jesse M.Lander Zach Lamm Courtney Lehmann Zach Lesser Jennifer Lewin Jeremy Lopez Genevieve Love Jennifer Low James Loxley Julia Reinhard Lupton Andrew McRae Jeffrey Masten *Carla Mazzio Paul Mezger Andrew Murphy Mark Netzloff Scott Newstrom Sharon O'Dair Simon Palfrey Matteo Panfallo Roberta Pearson Stephen Pincus Kristen Poole Leah Price Shankar Raman Eric Rasmussen *Brian Reynolds Katherine Rowe Francesca Royster Julie Sanders Kathryn Schwarz David Sedley Bill Sherman Cathy Shrank Adam Smyth Matthew Sperling *Tiffany Stern Garrett Sullivan Douglas Trevor Jennifer Waldron John Watkins Michael Whitmore Matthew Woodcock Ramona Wray Andew Zurcher Dr. Gary Taylor George Matthew Edgar Professor of English Florida State University Tallahassee, FL 32306-1580 Fax: (850)644-0811 Office: (850)645-6474 gtaylor@english.fsu.edu _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@shaksper.net The S H A K S P E R Web Site <http://www.shaksper.net> DISCLAIMER: Although SHAKSPER is a moderated discussion list, the opinions expressed on it are the sole property of the poster, and the editor assumes no responsibility for them.
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