It’s just a coincidence that the new Arden edition of “Timon of Athens” is being released at the same time that the Globe Theatre in London is premiering a major new production of the play. But both make the case that Timon, one of Shakespeare’s least read and least performed plays, still has something to offer to 21st century audiences. The latest Arden edition of “Timon of Athens,” was edited by Anthony B. Dawson and Gretchen E. Minton. In the opening pages of the volume, they warn readers, “Timon of Athens is a peculiar and to some an unpalatable play.”
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The Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS) has issued a call for papers for four sessions to be held at the International Medieval Congress on the weekend of May 7-10, 2009 at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo.
The congress is an annual gathering of over 3,000 medieval studies scholars in. It features over 600 paper [...]
Four years ago, linguist David Crystal and his actor son Ben Crystal created a subscription website to accompany and expand upon their Shakespeare glossary, “Shakespeare’s Words.” Because of space limitations, the book was able to include no more than six quotations from the plays/poems to illustrate each of the words and senses contained in the [...]
The Guardian has published an obituary of Richard Helgerson, one of the world’s leading authorities on Renaissance literature and culture. Helgerson died on April 26, 2008 at the age of 67 following a long battle with of pancreatic cancer.
Helgerson was a professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he had taught since 1970. He was the author [...]
The British Shakespeare Association (BSA) is currently accepting nominations for ten elected trustee positions. All current members of the BSA Board of Trustees are retiring this year in accordance with the association’s rules. The BSA was formed in 2002 to educate, promote, and foster a better understanding of Shakespeare and his works in the United [...]
Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre in London has announced that historian Andrew Gurr will receive the theatre company’s 2008 Sam Wanamaker Award. Gurr is one world’s leading authorities on Elizabethan theatre. His historical research on the original Globe Theatre helped to determine the dimensions and shape of the modern Globe reconstruction.
Patrick Spottiswoode, Director of Globe Education, [...]
Dr. Robert Bearman, archivist for The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, has been named to the Order of the British Empire in the Queen’s Birthday Honours. Dr. Bearman is being honored for his services to heritage. Source: Coventry Telegraph
The Newberry Library Center for Renaissance Studies in Chicago, Illinois recently announced that it has received a $775,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to fund a series of eight vernacular paleography institutes. The institutes will train scholars and graduate students from various academic disciplines to read handwriting from the late medieval period through [...]
The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. is currently accepting research fellowship applications for 2009-2010. The fellowships are designed to give professional scholars access to the library’s collections and encourage cross-disciplinary dialogue among scholars of the early modern period. The Folger offers five long-term fellowships lasting from six to nine months and around 35 short-term [...]
The International Shakespeare Association (ISA) has extended the deadline to submit proposals for papers, seminars and workshops for the Ninth World Shakespeare Congress from 30 June to 30 November 2008. The Congress will be held in Prague, The Czech Republic from 17 – 22 July 2011. Prague’s Charles University, founded in 1348 by Holy Roman [...]