The Northern Renaissance Seminar: ‘To set the word against the word’: new directions in early modern textual analysis’

The Northern Renaissance Seminar in association with CREME: http://creme.lancs.ac.uk/

‘To set the word against the word’: new directions in early modern textual analysis’, Lancaster University, Saturday 22 February 2014, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences Building, Meeting Room 3

Programme

10.00-10.30 Jonathan Culpeper and Alison Findlay-Contemporary understandings of Welsh, Scottish and Irish identities: Celtic characters in Shakespeare’s Henry V

10.30-11.00 Helen Davies-The Digitisation of early modern ‘disability’: ways of reading bodily difference in Tudor literature.

11.00-11.30 Amanda Pullan-Locating the discourse surrounding ‘Hagar and Ishmael’ in early modern English texts

11.30-1.00 Brunch

1.00-2.00 Andrew Hardie-The affordances of corpus analysis software in approaching EEBO-TCP

2.00-2.30 Jake Halford-Everything goes with Bacon: The legacy of Francis Bacon in the seventeenth century

2.30-3.00 Break

3.00-3.30 Rachel White-Surly Areopagites and Poetic Reform

3.30-4.00 Liz Oakley-Brown-Thomas Churchyard’s Corpus: material body and digital text

NB There is no registration fee. Please contact Liz Oakley-Brown (e.oakley-brown@lancaster.ac.uk) to register