Early Modern Literary Studies 6.3 (January,
2001)
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Articles:
Article Abstracts.
Ann Bowyer's Commonplace Book (Bodleian Library Ashmole
MS 51): Reading and Writing Among the "Middling Sort". [1] Victoria
Burke, University of Ottawa.
Translation as Image-Making: Elizabeth I's Translation
of Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy . [2] Lysbeth Benkert, Northern
State University.
The text and attribution of "Thou who dost all
my thoughts employ": a new Moulsworth poem? [3] Matthew Steggle,
Sheffield Hallam University.
"But Worth pretends": Discovering Jonsonian Masque
in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus . [4] Anita M. Hagerman,
Southwest Missouri State University.
An Apology for Knowledge: Gender and the Hermeneutics
of Incarnation in the Works of Aemilia Lanyer and Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz .
[5] B. R. Siegfried, Brigham Young University.
"The Wreck of Order" in Early Modern Women's
Drama . [6] Irene Burgess, Wheeling Jesuit University.
"Outrage your face": Anti-Theatricality
and Gender in Early Modern Closet Drama by Women. [7] Katherine O. Acheson,
University of Waterloo.
Resources :
Women Writers Online:
An Evaluation and Annotated Bibliography of Web Resources. [8] Georgianna
Ziegler, Folger Shakespeare Library
Chawton House Library: Transforming the Literary
Landscape. [9] Michael Wheeler, Chawton House Library.
The Perdita Project--A Winter's Report . [10] Jill
Seal, The Nottingham Trent University.
Alison Findlay, Stephanie Hodgson-Wright and Gweno
Williams, Women Dramatists 1550-1670: Plays in Performance. Lancaster
University Television, 1999. [11] Lisa Hopkins, Sheffield Hallam University.
An Interview with Germaine Greer . [12] Joan Fitzpatrick,
University College Northampton.
Note:
A note on Hamlet's illegitimacy identifying a source
of the "dram of eale" speech (Q2 1.4.17-38) . [13] Steve Sohmer,
Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA.
Reviews :
Michael Schoenfeldt. Bodies and Selves in Early
Modern England: Physiology and Inwardness in Spenser, Shakespeare, Herbert,
and Milton. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999. [14] Paul Dyck, Canadian
Mennonite University.
Daniel J. Vitkus. Three Turk Plays from Early Modern
England: Selimus, A Christian Turned Turk, and The Renegado . New York:
Columbia UP, 2000. [15] Greg Bak, Massachusetts Center for Renaissance
Studies.
Anna Battigelli. Margaret Cavendish and the Exiles
of the Mind. Lexington, Kentucky: UP of Kentucky, 1998. [16] Carrie
Hintz, Queens College/CUNY.
Gerald M. Pinciss. Forbidden Matter: Religion
in the Drama of Shakespeare and His Contemporaries . Newark: U of Delaware
P, 2000. [17] Corinne S. Abate, Montclair State University.
Margaret J. M. Ezell. Social Authorship and
the Advent of Print . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1999. [18] Scott
Nixon, The Queen's College, Oxford.
Gordon Williams. Shakespeare, Sex, and the Print
Revolution . Atlantic Highland: Athlone P 1996. [19] Amina Alyal, Trinity
and All Saints College, University of Leeds.
Leah S. Marcus, Janel Mueller, and Mary Beth Rose,
eds. Elizabeth I: Collected Works . Chicago and London: U of Chicago
P, 2000. [20] Douglas Bruster, University of Texas at Austin.
Theatre Reviews:
Articles Accepted and Forthcoming in
Future Issues :
Greenaway's Books. Steven Marx, Cal Poly University.
Time for the Plebs in Julius Caesar . Christopher Holmes, McGill
University
Othello , the Baroque, and Religious Mentalities. Anthony Gilbert,
Lancaster University.
Responses to articles, reviews, and notes appearing in this issue
that are intended for the Readers' Forum may be sent to the Editor at L.M.Hopkins@shu.ac.uk .
Responses to this piece intended for the Readers'
Forum may be sent to the Editor at L.M.Hopkins@shu.ac.uk .
©
2001-, Lisa Hopkins (Editor, EMLS ).