The Early Modern Intelligencer
CFP: Shakespeare Institute Review
The Shakespeare Institute Review is a new online academic journal, which is funded by the University of Birmingham College of Arts and Law. It is run by four research students at the Shakespeare Institute, Stratford-upon-Avon, UK.
Students at this institution, and on other postgraduate Shakespeare programmes, are invited and encouraged to contribute short papers for publication. Each issue of the journal will be themed.
We thought it exhilaratingly inappropriate, and so irresistible, to signal the birth of this journal with an issue looking at death.
Students are encouraged to submit papers, between 1,500 and 2,500 words, on topics relating to death, mortality and religion in Shakespeare’s plays, or elsewhere in the Early Modern period.
Possible topics might include, but are not restricted to:
- Critical examinations of the way that various of Shakespeare’s characters deal with death, or die. This could include close-reading, comparative analysis, and analysis from a specific theoretical position (Marxist, feminist, etc.).
- Historical studies of how mortality or religion was understood in the early Modern period, and of how Shakespeare makes use of (and plays off) those understandings in his plays.
- Considerations of the political, ethical, religious, spiritual and existential significances of mortality or religion in the Early Modern period, and for Shakespeare’s characters.
- Comparisons between how Shakespeare understands mortality, and how other creative artists and philosophers–-of Shakespeare’s time, or before, or after–-have understood it.
- More intensely personal and experientially engaged writing on how Shakespeare’s plays have helped you deal with death–-with your own mortality, or with the death of people that you know. How does Shakespeare make you look at death, and is this vision comforting or distressing? Does Shakespeare get to the truth of death, for you, or not?
- Reflections on metaphysical and spiritual truths that arise from Shakespeare’s plays.
- More provocative reflections on how the writing that is produced by the Modern academy–-writing that is critical, theoretical, historical—does not deal adequately with death in Shakespeare’s plays, and suggestions as to how this inadequacy can be rectified.
Suggestions of other topics will be warmly received.
Papers should be submitted to shakesreview@gmail.com, with a deadline of 20 May 2012.
All submissions will be reviewed by the editorial board, and those submissions that are selected will be published in our first online issue. Please contact us for further information.
Taverns, locals and street corners: New AHRC Project on Tavern Culture
Taverns, locals and street corners: Cross-chronological studies in community drinking, regulation and public space
Project
This AHRC Connected Communities pilot study on tavern culture (2012) ranges from early modern Europe to the present day. It investigates whether today’s real and imagined patterns of drinking – people congregating in public spaces at night, sold alcohol and revelling – are recurring practices and representations of drinking and of competing communities. It looks at how public space is used, and how tavern culture produces places and social groupings; how these spaces are regulated in the name of order, morality and health; the rhetorics of drinking and taverns, of pleasure, harm and authority. The project asks if the performance of drinking, and ideas of spectacle and carnival, are still part of modern drinking culture, and if contemporary questions about public policy on drinking and ‘anti-social behaviour’ find resonances in the past.
The participants, co-ordinated by Dr Fabrizio Nevola (PI), are investigating three separate periods and places.
1. Florence in the 16th century
Dr Fabrizio Nevola and Dr David Rosenthal (University of Bath)
This strand starts by using a detailed ownership and rental census of 1561 to map prominent Florentine taverns and the streetscapes (shops, workshops, houses) around them, in order to locate the tavern in urban space and better understand its emplacement within communities and networks. It then looks at the regulatory and, drawing on a range of archival and printed sources, wider discursive regimes surrounding taverns and drinking between the mid-16th and mid-17th centuries, as economic instability and the moral imperatives of religious reform combined to make the tavern a fiercely contested site in the shaping of identity and community.
2. London in the 18th century
Dr Jane Milling and Dr Jonathan Owen (University of Exeter)
This strand examines how the outcry against public drinking in 18th-century London was matched by its championing in terms of commerce and sociability. It investigates material on public drinking in Old Bailey records, in regulatory legislation, pamphleteering and in civic society treatises. It also examines theatrical and visual representations of public drinking and disorder (eg Hogarth’s Beer Street and Gin Lane, 1751). This study asks what was at stake for the competing communities in these public spaces, and what do representations of communal drinking reveal about it as a creative or destructive force for communities.
3. Bristol in the 21st century
Dr Antonia Layard (University of Cardiff)
This strand focuses on one or more pubs in Bristol in order to investigate modern regulation and governance of drinking. Through interviews with owners, police, users, and town centre managers, it asks what kind of regulatory regime pubs are subject to and the implications of this both for the establishment itself and for its surroundings. It looks at how the law makes the pub a public space, but one in which entry can nonetheless be refused (dress codes, disorderly conduct). It also examines non-legal forms of governance that help to define clientele and behaviour, such as the use of pricing, signage and decor, and security. The project also asks what the analyses of regulatory strategies from Renaissance Florence and Georgian London might tell us about pubs today.
Visit the project website and blog at http://tavernsproject.com/ to find out more.
CFP: Art and its Afterlives, Courtauld Institute of Art
Art and Its Afterlives
Fourth Early Modern Symposium
Saturday 17 November 2012
The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN
CALL FOR PAPERS
Art and Its Afterlives aims to address the ways in which the work of art continues to resonate after its creation. While much art history takes as its focus the initial facture of the work of art, this one-day symposium explores what happens to early modern art after the moment of its making. How did early modern works continue to be created in their display, preservation, and reception from the moment of their creation on? Papers will examine how art is shaped by its afterlives – whether these collect, curate, cut up, cut out, copy or correct it – and the ways in which art both persists and changes through time as a material object, a field of generative meaning, and a subject of debate and interpretation. Material, technical and social histories as well as theoretical approaches drawn from the discipline of art history and other fields of the humanities are welcome. Accounts from curatorial practice and the field of museology are also encouraged.
The question of afterlife is an pertinent topic for art history in general, where the work of art is uniquely tied to a particular assemblage of materials which inevitably change with time, rendering fraught questions of preservation, the presence or possibility of copies, the idea of original state, and how a work of art is staged for a viewer. Less material but no less concrete, the interactions between the work and the viewer, and between the work and the its assumed referent are not stable but open to change. The question of afterlife is particularly relevant for the early modern period, when emergent art markets and cultures of collection allowed not only the circulation of artworks, but also their appropriation and adaptation. Taking as its point of departure Bourdieu’s encouragement to investigate ‘not only the material production of the work but also the production of the value of the work’, this symposium privileges the afterlives of art and the alternative histories they present.
Topics for discussion may include, but are not limited to:
• Histories of collection and display – acquisition and the accrual of value; assignment of category or genre; travel and re-contextualization; political appropriation and/or subversion
• Conservation and technical art history – preservation vs. restoration of past state; hidden layers and the discovery of the underneath; changing material support
• Reception and criticism –boundary between art and reception; development of art historical practice; shifting contexts of viewership and viewer negotiation
• Copy and imitation – changing perceptions of a master’s hand vs. workshop; forging and faking; serial reproduction; changing conceptions of emulation and originality; contemporary uses of early modern works and spaces
• Destruction and embellishment – iconoclasm and the religious image; revolution and vandalism; disassembly and remaking; framing and re-framing
Art and Its Afterlives is the fourth symposium of The Courtauld’s Early Modern Department. We invite proposals from scholars and postgraduates for papers that explore the theme of art and its afterlives in all forms of visual and material culture from the early modern period (c.1560-1848) including painting, sculpture, architecture, decorative arts, performance, print media, graphic arts, and the intersections between them.
Please send proposals of no more than 250 words by 1 July 2012 to Laura Sanders and Francesca Whitlum-Cooper.
Further details will be posted when available on The Courtauld Institute of Art website: http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/researchforum/index.shtml
Organized by Laura Sanders and Francesca Whitlum-Cooper
(The Courtauld Institute of Art)
Society of Apothecaries 400th Anniversary Celebration
The Society of Apothecaries celebrates its 400th Anniversary in 2017. Its hall was built on the site of the guest house of the Dominican Friary, dissolved by Henry VIII in 1538. On 26 June Dr Nick Holder will be giving a talk about the history of the site and the remains still extant. [He has just been awarded his PhD from Royal Holloway, University of London on a thesis on mediaeval monastic foundations in the City]. His lecture starts at 6pm to be followed by a short talk on the more recent activities of the Dominicans by Fr Timothy Radcliffe OP (The Master’s chaplain and the only English Master of the Order of Preachers since the Order’s foundation in 1216). Please join us for the lecture and also a supper in the Great Hall afterwards. This event will support the 400th anniversary appeal towards support for medical students and junior doctors, and the Friends of the Archives.
Places must be booked in advance by Friday 15 June (£15 for the lecture,£50 for supper following).
Booking forms and further details are available from Karen Chester.
Dr Alice Hunt, ‘Oliver Cromwell and the Rituals of the Republic’, 25 May
We are pleased to announce our next event.
Dr Alice Hunt, ‘Oliver Cromwell and the Rituals of the Republic’
25 May 2012
6:30 pm
Room B30, Malet Street
Free to Members, £5 Membership, £3 Guests – All Welcome
Alice Hunt explored early modern royal coronation rituals from 1509 to 1559 in her book, The Drama of Coronation: Medieval Ceremony in Early Modern England.
Her current research project, ‘Twixt earnest and twixt game’: Ceremony and Play in Early Modern England, examines the survival of ceremonies and rituals in Protestant England.
Curiously Drawn: Early Modern Science as a Visual Pursuit
A conference to be held at The Royal Society, Thursday 21 – Friday 22 June, 2012. The Royal Society, 6-9 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AG.
Science produces some of the most intriguing and arresting images in modern culture, from wildlife photographs to scanning electron microscope images. Yet the historical links between scientific research and visual representation are not always apparent. This conference brings together historians of science and art in order to examine the relationship between science and visual culture in the first hundred years of the Royal Society. We hope that the meeting will demonstrate how art, artists, and print-makers enabled creativity and innovation in science, and the extent to which naturalists and natural philosophers, in turn, transformed visual resources and strategies into something of their own.
This event is supported by the AHRC as part of an international network on ‘Origins of science as a visual pursuit: the case of the early Royal Society’ (http://picturingscience.wordpress.com). Relevant printed books and manuscripts from the Royal Society’s collections will be on display during the meeting.
For abstracts of papers, a full programme and registration details please visit the Royal Society’s website http://royalsociety.org/events/2012/curiously-drawn/.
For further information please contact Dr Felicity Henderson, Events and Exhibitions Manager, Royal Society Centre for History of Science. Tel +44 (0)20 7451 2597. Web royalsociety.org
CFP: Fourteenth Annual British Graduate Shakespeare Conference
The Shakespeare Institute
The University of Birmingham
14-16 June 2012
Call for papers
Deadline Friday 4 May 2012
The Shakespeare Institute invites graduate students with interests in both Shakespearean and Renaissance studies to join them in June for the Fourteenth Annual British Graduate Shakespeare Conference.
The interdisciplinary conference provides a friendly but stimulating academic forum in which graduate students from all over the world can present their research and meet together in an active centre of Shakespearean research and theatre: Shakespeare’s home town of Stratford-upon-Avon. Undergraduate students in their final two years of study are also invited to attend the conference as auditors.
The conference will feature talks by Peter Holland (Notre Dame), Tiffany Stern (Oxford), Paul Menzer (Mary Baldwin), Martin Butler (Leeds), Deborah Shaw (RSC), René Weis (UCL), and Katherine Duncan-Jones (Oxford). Delegates have the opportunity to attend the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production of Richard III, part of the World Shakespeare Festival, at a group-booking price. Lunch will be provided each day, and delgates are invited to a dance and drinks reception one night.
Abstracts of approximately 200 words for papers twenty minutes in length (3,000 words or less) are invited. Delegates wishing to give papers must register by Friday 4 May 2012. Early registration is strongly encouraged to ensure a place on the conference programme.
The BritGrad website contains more information about the event and venue, including prices and downloadable registration forms: www.britgrad.wordpress.com.
Find them on Facebook:
BritGrad 2012
Contact email: britgrad@yahoo.com
CFP: Second Tudor and Stuart Ireland Conference
A reminder that the call for papers for the Second Tudor and Stuart Ireland Conference (University College Dublin, 31 August – 1 September 2012) closes on 27 April. Proposals for papers and panels on any aspect of society in Ireland during the Tudor and Stuart eras are welcome. Postgraduates are particularly encouraged to offer papers.
The organisers are also pleased to announce that the conference plenary address will be delivered by Professor John Patrick Montaño (University of Delaware), author of The Roots of English Colonialism in Ireland (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
For further information, including details of podcasts from the first conference, please visit the conference website www.tudorstuartireland.com or contact the organisers at info@tudorstuartireland.com.
Dr Helen Smith, ‘Materialising the Book: Print and Practice in Moxon’s Mechanick Exercises’
Dr Helen Smith, ‘Materialising the Book: Print and Practice in Moxon’s Mechanick Exercises’
Friday 27 April, 6.30 pm, Malet Street, room B02
A warm invitation to our next event. Dr Helen Smith works at the University of York where she teaches early modern literature. Her research interests include the history of the book, women and gender in early modern England, and questions of religious experience, travel, and conversion. She is Co-Investigator of the AHRC-funded project Conversion Narratives in Early Modern England, more details here: http://www.york.ac.uk/crems/conversion/, and is currently writing a book called ‘Grossly Material Things’: Women and Book Production in Early Modern England
(OUP).
Membership can be obtained at any of our lectures for £5 for the academic year, or single lectures can be attended for £3 each.
CFP: Bonds, Lies, and Circumstances: Discourses of Truth-Telling in the Renaissance
Bonds, Lies, and Circumstances: Discourses of Truth-Telling in the Renaissance
An International and Interdisciplinary Conference
21st – 23rd March, 2013
School of English, University of St Andrews
If a lie had no more faces but one, as truth had, we should be in farre better termes than we are: For whatsoever a lier should say, we would take it in a contrarie sense. But the opposite of truth has many shapes, and an undefinite field.
Michel de Montaigne, ‘Of Lyers’ (Florio translation -1603)
Can we say that truth has ‘no more faces than one’? Montaigne implies that human relationships with truth are straightforward, whereas our attitudes towards falsehood are complicated by its multiplicity. But how stable is the notion of ‘truth’? Does truth – like falsehood – appear in many forms, and if so, can we ever take it at face value?
Legal, emotional, and spiritual concerns — all vital to truth-telling discourses — are intimately bound in the Renaissance. This conference offers a forum for the exploration of their intersections. The study of legal culture has become increasingly central to the analysis of early modern literary texts, and legal paradigms are inescapable when scholars turn their attention, as many have recently done, to the equivocal power of language to bind people together. We find the legal value of such bonds – in the form of oaths, promises and contracts – going hand in hand with interpersonal relationships and their emotional and spiritual dimensions.
Our objective is to foster debate about the marriage between two clearly connected fields: Law and Literature; and the study of early modern emotion. How do these fields work together? We form bonds; we tell lies; we search for and construct truths: but under what circumstances?
Possible paper topics include, but are not limited to:
- The connections between law, emotion, and obligation, and how the works of Shakespeare and his contemporaries engage with these dynamics.
- The formation and evaluation of bonds in the early modern world.
- How public/private spaces affect attitudes towards truth-telling.
- The relationship between faith, truth, and honesty in the Renaissance.
- How belief and trust are generated.
- The binding power of language and rhetoric.
- Transmissions of knowledge, belief, and emotion.
Confirmed keynote speakers are:
John Kerrigan (Cambridge), on Bonds
Andrew Hadfield (Sussex), on Lies
Lorna Hutson (St Andrews), on Circumstances
Proposals for 20-minute papers should include an abstract (of no more than 200 words), 3 keywords, and 3 citations, and should be emailed to earlymodern[at]st-andrews.co.uk. We are happy to consider proposals for panels; in the event that we are unable to accommodate the panel, papers will be considered on an individual basis.
All abstracts must be received by July 31st 2012.
We welcome proposals from researchers at all stages of their careers, working in departments of Art History, Comparative Literature, English, History, Languages, Law, Theology, and other relevant subject areas. General questions can be directed to the conference organizers – Rachel Holmes and Toria Johnson – at earlymodern[at]st-andrews.co.uk.
In conjunction with the Centre for Mediaeval and Early Modern Law and Literature (CMEMLL), with generous support from the Society for Renaissance Studies.
Early Modern Cities in Comparative Perspective: Folger Institute
Early Modern Cities in Comparative Perspective
Folger Institute, Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, DC
27-29 September 2012
Schedule (abstracts are being added as they are received)
How does the space of a city function as the figure or ground of scholarship, and what difference does it make? Folger Institute faculty weekend seminars on early modern cities have fostered scholarly investigations of the ways conceptualisations of space are changing the focus in research and teaching. This conference will draw on localized expertise for comparative discussion. Invited speakers will address assertions of exceptionalism and claims to a classical heritage; identify features and causes of notions of ‘organic’ cultures; trace the routes of global commerce and cultural encounter; and account for agents of growth and decline.
Complementing the Folger exhibition on Open City: London, 1500-1700, the conference begins with a case study of London and its scientific communities by Deborah E. Harkness (University of Southern California). A plenary lecture will anchor each of the four fields of investigation: Public ceremony and empire with Linda A. Curcio-Nagy (University of Nevada, Reno); Intellectual communities and the print trade with Anthony Grafton (Princeton University); Trade and the dynamics of growth and decline with Jan de Vries (University of California at Berkeley); and Cultural intermediaries and go-betweens with E. Natalie Rothman (University of Toronto). Consult the website for additional speakers who will provide counterexamples in each of these fields and the schedule that allows for–and depends on–extensive discussion among participants.
Organisers: Patricia Fortini Brown (Princeton University), Palmira Brummett (Brown University), Kathleen Lynch (The Folger Institute), Karen Newman (Brown University), Lena Cowen Orlin (Georgetown University), and Mariët Westermann (The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation).
Schedule: Thursday evening through Saturday afternoon, 27 through 29 September 2012.
Apply: 8 June 2012 for grants-in-aid (for Folger Institute consortium affiliates). Funding is being sought to extend grants-in-aid to non-consortium participants; consult the Institute’s website for updated information.
Register: Those not applying for grants-in-aid may register(pdf) through 14 September 2012 (assuming space remains.) All conference-goers must pay a hospitality fee of $75.00 ($50.00 for graduate students). This fee helps defray the expenses of lunch, refreshments, and the opening and closing receptions.
Questions? Please contact institute@folger.edu.
Royal Devotion: Monarchy and the Book of Common Prayer
Monarchy and the Book of Common Prayer
Lambeth Palace Library
1 May – 14 July 2012 Tuesday – Saturday & Bank Holiday Mondays 7 May & 4 June
This exhibition traces the close relationship between royalty and religion from medieval to modern times. It tells the story of the Book of Common Prayer and its importance in national life. This story is illustrated with books, manuscripts and objects, many of which have royal or other important provenances. The centrepiece of the exhibition will be the 1662 revision of the Book of Common Prayer. Other highlights of the exhibition include:
A 1549 printing of the Book of Common Prayer
Medieval illuminated manuscripts, including the Book of Hours of Richard III
Queen Elizabeth I’s personal prayer book and a copy of the book of private devotions compiled for Queen Elizabeth II in preparation for her coronation
The Book of Common Prayer used at the wedding of Queen Victoria
Charles I’s own handwritten revision of State Prayers
Opening Times
Tuesday – Friday 11.00 – 13.30 and 14.00 – 17.00 (last entry 16.00)
Saturdays and Bank Holidays 11.00 – 16.00 (last entry 15.00).
Tickets are issued with timed entry slots. The time you select is the earliest time you can enter the exhibition.
£12 Adults, £10 Concessions (over-60s & students & unemployed), under-17s free.
Price includes printed exhibition guide. Tickets on sale from 15 February. During the opening celebration week (1-5 May) all tickets are £6 (no further concessions).
To buy tickets visit the Ticketmaster exhibition website or call 0844 847 1698.
For any other enquiries please ring: 07432 044820
There is also a series of lectures to accompany the exhibition:
The Women’s Library is seeking a new home
On Wednesday 14 March, London Metropolitan University’s Board of Governors announced that they will be seeking a new home, custodian or sponsor of The Women’s Library’s collections.
If a new home is not found by the end of December 2012, the Library will move to opening hours of one day per week for a period of three years, with a further review at the end of that period. Visit the Women’s Library homepage to stay informed of further developments, and we are in the process of contacting key stakeholders.
You can find out more about the library and its collections at http://www.londonmet.ac.uk/thewomenslibrary/aboutthecollections/
If you have any suggestions of potential custodians, or any queries, please email the Women’s Library.
The Early Modern Lucretius, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 16-17 May 2012
The Early Modern Lucretius
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 16-17 May 2012
Stephen Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the Renaissance Began vividly narrates the rediscovery of Lucretius’ great philosophical epic, the De rerum natura. Professor Greenblatt will open an interdisciplinary conference to be held by the Centre for Early Modern Studies, University of Oxford, on ‘The Early Modern Lucretius’ (May 16-17 2012). Specialists in classical, English and European literature, history and philosophy will explore the contradictory reception of this fascinating and challenging poem. The conference will examine in detail how particular passages were interpreted by a range of readers from natural philosophers to women intellectuals, from Machiavelli to Montaigne and Hobbes. There will be a special session in which manuscript and print editions of Lucretius from the Bodleian Library will be presented by David Butterfield, who is preparing a new edition of the poem. Other participants will include Sharon Achinstein, Alison Brown, David Butterfield, Line Cottegnies, Nicholas Davidson, Philip Hardie, Nick Hardy, Stephen Harrison, Ian Maclean, David Norbrook, Richard Scholar, Rhodri Lewis, Will Poole, Wes Williams, and Catherine Wilson.
The conference will take place on Wednesday 16 May and the morning of Thursday 17 May 2012. It will open with a lecture by Stephen Greenblatt on ‘Lucretius and Aesthetic Toleration’. The closing session on the Wednesday will be a Bodleian masterclass by David Butterfield. There will be panels on religion and atheism, poetry and philosophy, politics and the state, and readers and paratexts. Participants will include Alison Brown, author of The Return of Lucretius to Renaissance Florence, Philip Hardie, author of Lucretian Receptions, David Norbrook, co-editor of a new edition of Lucy Hutchinson’s translation, and Catherine Wilson, author of Epicureanism at the Origins of Modernity, Sharon Achinstein, Line Cottegnies, Nicholas Davidson, Nick Hardy, Stephen Harrison, Ian Maclean, Richard Scholar, Rhodri Lewis, William Poole, and Wes Williams.
Dr Laura Jacobs, ‘Writing about Blindness in Early Modern England: the case of John Milton ‘, 23 March
Dr Laura Jacobs, ‘Writing about Blindness in Early Modern England: the case of John Milton (1608-1674)’, Friday 23 March, 6.30 pm, Malet St, room B18
We are delighted to invite you to our next event at which our secretary, Dr Laura Jacobs, will present some of the findings of her PhD on Milton and blindness in the seventeenth century. Laura has been a stalwart of the society since its inception in 2006 and we very much hope you can attend her paper.
Membership can be obtained on the night (£5) or you can attend single lectures at £3 each.
Birkbeck Medieval and Renaissance Summer School, 27-29 June 2012
The newly-founded Birkbeck Medieval and Renaissance Summer School will deliver exciting, cutting-edge research to postgraduates and early-career scholars, and will help participants develop crucial research skills. Hosted by Birkbeck, University of London, and located in the heart of Bloomsbury, the Summer School draws together some of Britain’s foremost scholars of Medieval and Renaissance literature, art, culture and history.
Students will be offered a rich programme of lectures, seminars, and workshops, and will also be introduced to some of London’s extraordinary research resources and cultural institutions, including the British Library, the Victoria and Albert Museum, Westminster Abbey, and Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre.
This year’s theme is ‘In the City’, and lectures and workshops will include discussion of:
· Cities on the world stage: London, Venice, and Jerusalem
· Trade and travel
· London’s criminal world
· London’s playhouses, plagues and churches
· London’s languages: slang and satire
The Summer School offers a wonderful opportunity for participants to experience the latest academic research; to meet other students engaged in Medieval and Renaissance research; and to begin to get to know Medieval and Renaissance London.
You can find out more at Birkbeck Medieval and Renaissance Summer School.
Baited Hooks at All Hallows by the Tower, 22 March 2012
Baited Hooks
22 March 2012, 7 pm
All Hallows by the Tower
Presented by All Hallows by the Tower and Clio’s Company, Baited Hooks: Risk in Henry VII’s London is a piece of site specific theatre relating to All Hallows by the Tower in 1533. Everything that happens in the show could have happened in that place on a particular day in that year. The show began life as a project for schools but this is an experimental version for grown ups.
The show involves following the action round the church and Tudor style food is included in the ticket price.
Tickets are £16 and must be booked in advance.
Tickets are available from:
Baited Hooks Bookings
All Hallows by the Tower
Byward Street
London
EC3N 4DJ
Please make cheques payable to ‘All Hallows by the Tower’.
Or book online at eTickets
All proceeds will to to the All Hallows and Clio’s Company in Education Project and to the All Hallows relighting project.
Call for Papers: 14th Annual British Graduate Shakespeare Conference
BritGrad: for graduate students, by graduate students
14-16 June 2012, Stratford-upon-Avon
Registration for the 2012 conference in now open. Delegates must register by 4 May, auditors have until 25 May.
Topics related to Shakespeare and Renaissance studies are welcome.
Visit the BritGrad homepage for more information.
Call for Papers: Invention, Philosophy and Technology in the 17th Century
This symposium will look the history of invention, technology and philosophy in the early modern era, the ways in which material life changed in the period. It will consider how the period constituted the relationships between science, philosophy and craft, or between trade and society. Topics might include: public works and the provision of society – drainage, water, sewers, food, mining, weapons, surgical instruments, trade and trade-guilds; the regulation of the city; is ‘capitalism’ a helpful category for thinking the early modern era?; what was the relationship between science and society?; the early modern ‘expert’; innovation and tradition; literature and invention; automata and the early modern machine.
Symposium – May 23rd CREMS – University of York. Speakers include: Claire Preston (Birmingham), Ayesha Mukherjee (Exeter). Contact Kevin Killeen – kevin.killeen@york.ac.uk
This symposium is part of the entirely digressive Thomas Browne Seminar, whose designs for bullets made no impact whatsoever on the course of the civil war. http://www.york.ac.uk/english/news-events/browne/
Discovering the English Civil War with the UK Battlefields Trust, 31 March 2012
Discovering the English Civil War
Saturday 31 March 2012
Set in the panelled Guesten Hall of Guildford’s early 17th century Abbot’s Hospital, this afternoon conference features:
* The life of the Civil War soldier by Alan Turton, author and former curator of Basing House.
* The Civil War in Surrey and NE Hants by Julian Humphrys, regular contributor to BBC History Magazine and Development Officer of the Battlefields Trust.
* A question and answer session with Petersfield author Mike Arnold whose best-selling Stryker series is set in the Civil War.
A range of Civil War material will be on display and all three speakers will be signing copies of their books during the refreshment break.
Starts: 2.00pm, Abbot’s Hospital, High Street, Guildford, GU1 3AJ.
Tickets: £12 Battlefields Trust members, £15 non-members (includes tea/coffee) available by sending cheque payable to the Battlefields Trust for the appropriate amount to Civil War Conference, 29 Wolseley Rd, Godalming, GU7 3EA.
Contact: Julian Humphrys 07930 432444
For more information see the Battlefields Trust events page.


