beggarsbush.org.uk
Beggars Bush » Dublin
http://www.beggarsbush.org.uk/tag/dublin
A Perambulation through the Disciplines of History, Geography, Archaeology, Literature, Philology, Natural History, Botany, Biography and Beggary. Announcement: Andrew Yarranton England’s Improvement. England’s Improvement by Sea and Land to outdo the Dutch without fighting. We are almost as Beggars-bush, and we cannot tell how to help our selves. Read the rest of this entry ». March 30th, 2011 Filed under:. John Clavell A Lost Prologue to The Beggars Bush. A Begger haunts, where he good Dole receives.
beggarsbush.org.uk
Beggars Bush » Andrew Yarranton
http://www.beggarsbush.org.uk/tag/yarranton
A Perambulation through the Disciplines of History, Geography, Archaeology, Literature, Philology, Natural History, Botany, Biography and Beggary. Announcement: Andrew Yarranton England’s Improvement. England’s Improvement by Sea and Land to outdo the Dutch without fighting. We are almost as Beggars-bush, and we cannot tell how to help our selves. Read the rest of this entry ». March 30th, 2011 Filed under:. Sticky: Dublin, Donnybrook Beggars boush. Current location and earliest record. March 13th, 2011 ...
emue.wordpress.com
Collaborative Online Reading of ‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore | Early Modern Underground
https://emue.wordpress.com/2009/10/25/collaborative-online-reading-of-tis-pity-shes-a-whore
A forum for Renaissance lit geeks. Laquo; EMU meeting: Oct. 16. 8216;Tis Pity She’s a Whore. Collaborative Online Reading of ‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore. October 25, 2009 by Jennifer. It has been decided: we’re going to read John Ford’s. 8216;Tis Pity She’s a Whore. Discussion begins the week of November 8, so you can start reading now. Please join us! Posted in Early Modern drama. Tagged 'Tis Pity She's a Whore. Collaborative reading and discussion. On October 25, 2009 at 5:21 pm. Realizing that it isn̵...
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: Carnivalesque 52
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2009/07/carnivalesque-52.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Tuesday, July 21, 2009. 52 is now up at Gilbert Mabbott. Posted by David Swain. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Thank you for visiting. This occasional blog explores topics of current interest or material I am working on, but it is also for my undergraduate students and will often support material I am teaching. Birds and the Bard. News on the Rialto. Textual Studies, 1500-1800.
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: Local (Alternative) Shakespeare
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2009/07/local-alternative-shakespeare.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Friday, July 24, 2009. The Shakespeare festival season is upon us. Always fun, and often revealing of who Shakespeare is in the popular imagination. The town I’ve lived in for two years is, by all measures, stuffed with Boston-area academics, many of them historians. So when I saw the notice for a 400th Anniversary celebration of the publication of the Sonnets. This weekend, I was more than curious. Then I read the program. A sedate, almost orthodox...
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: Wolf Hall
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2009/10/wolf-hall.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Wednesday, October 7, 2009. The Henrician period is back in the news (actually, when is it out? With yesterday's award of the Man Booker Prize. To Hilary Mantel for Wolf Hall. Treating Thomas Cromwell, the Anne Boleyn marriage, and it's dissolution. The title refers to Wolf Hall, the seat of the Seymour family, and home of Henry's next wife, Jane Seymour. Reviews here. The last a terrific review by Colin Burrow in the London Review.
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: August 2009
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2009_08_01_archive.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Tuesday, August 25, 2009. Nature's Bias: Sex Testing. In the bewildering and wonderful scene in Twelfth Night. Sebastian’s breezy explanation comes to mind in the current media frenzy surrounding the 18-year-old South African runner, Caster Semenya, who won the women’s 800 meter at the world track and field championships in Berlin, only to have her gender immediately questioned and put to the test. Again and educate the public about her case. Nature...
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: Excuses, excuses ...
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2011/06/excuses-excuses.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Monday, June 27, 2011. Excuses, excuses . I'm reviving this, my moribund blog, with a couple excuses. Somewhat incidental to Excuse One, Routledge has updated and reissued the encyclopedia I co-edited with my former advisor, Tudor England: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland, 2001), in their rebranded reference series. A trifle garish, but nice to have it in paperback now. For Broadview Publishing's Broadview Anthology of British Literature. Thank yo...
earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com
Early Modern Renaissance: July 2009
http://earlymodernrenaissance.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
Notes on literature, history, and culture 1500 to 1700. Friday, July 24, 2009. The Shakespeare festival season is upon us. Always fun, and often revealing of who Shakespeare is in the popular imagination. The town I’ve lived in for two years is, by all measures, stuffed with Boston-area academics, many of them historians. So when I saw the notice for a 400th Anniversary celebration of the publication of the Sonnets. This weekend, I was more than curious. Then I read the program. A sedate, almost orthodox...