2017 Centre for the Study of the Renaissance Director's Report
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Director’s Report for the Advisory Board of the Centre for the Study of the Renaissance April 2017 St Mary’s Guildhall, Coventry Table of Contents Abbreviations.............................................................................................................................0 DIRECTOR’S WELCOME ......................................................................................................1 TEACHING AND POSTGRADUATE TRAINING ACTIVITIES........................................2 Centre-Based Postgraduate Teaching ................................................................................................. 2 SKILLS SESSIONS OPEN TO OTHER STUDENTS IN THE FACULTY...........................3 English Palaeography & Latin for Research in the Humanities..............................................................3 NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL TRAINING.............................................................3 Warwick–Warburg Programme........................................................................................................3 Warwick-Newberry Programme, including the Warwick Transatlantic Fellowship......................................3 WARWICK-MONASH CONSORTIUM..................................................................................6 CURRENT PROJECT-RELATED RESEARCH .....................................................................7 The Correspondence of Isaac Casaubon.............................................................................................. 7 Early Modern Conversions: Religions, Cultures, Cognitive Ecologies........................................................ 7 The Cryfield Grange Project ............................................................................................................ 8 Petrarch Commentary and Exegesis in Renaissance Italy, c. 1350-c. 1650............................................... 9 Antiquity and its Uses: Reception and Renewal .................................................................................. 9 CSR-SUPPORTED CONFERENCES, WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, SEMINARS ..................13 Neapolitan Phoenix: Heritage and Renewal in Renaissance and Early Modern Naples (1442-1647)......... 13 The Musical Humanism of the Renaissance and its Legacy.................................................................. 14 Neo-Latin Studies Today: an IANLS Vacation School .................................................................... 15 In the Light of Gloriana............................................................................................................... 16 More than meets the Page: Printing Text and Images in Italy, 1570s – 1700s ....................................... 17 Contexts of Literary Criticism in Early Modern Italy and Beyond........................................................ 18 STVDIO Seminar Programme, .................................................................................................... 19 Early Career Convivium,.............................................................................................................. 19 CSR Podcast Series, .................................................................................................................... 20 The Medieval Seminar Series..........................................................................................................20 Translating Cultures of the Past..................................................................................................... 21 FISIER ....................................................................................................................................22 WARWICK PARTICIPATION IN THE RSA ANNUAL MEETING..................................22 INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH...................................................................................................25 1 Abbreviations University of Warwick CSR Centre for the Study of the Renaissance CADRE Centre for Arts Doctoral Research Excellence HRC Humanities Research Centre HRF Humanities Research Fund (Research & Impact Services) IAS Institute for Advanced Study IATL Institute for Advanced Teaching & Learning RIS Research and Impact Services SMLC School of Modern Languages and Cultures External Organisations AHRC Arts and Humanities Research Council CESR Centre d’Études Supérieures de la Renaissance, Tours ERC European Research Council FISIER Fédération Internationale des Sociétés et Instituts pour l’Étude de la Renaissance JHU The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore (USA) RSA Renaissance Society of America SRS Society for Renaissance Studies SNLS Society for Neo-Latin Studies Roles and Functions EC / ECF Early Career (Fellow / Fellowship) DGS Director of Graduate Studies Co-I Co-Investigator PGR / PGT Postgraduate Research / Postgraduate Taught PI Principal Investigator RF Research Fellow / Fellowship RA Research Assistant UG Undergraduate VF Visiting Fellow / Fellowship 0 DIRECTOR’S WELCOME ‘It is a great pleasure to be here with you in Warwick, a seemingly magical place, as a lot of friends and colleagues have been drawn to and passed through it during the last years. So if you are interested in Renaissance studies, this is probably the best place to be!’ It is with these unsolicited, but very flattering words that one of our international STVDIO seminar speakers, Dr Matthias Roick (Göttingen University/Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbüttel), opened his talk on 7 February 2017. They seem to be an apt beginning too for the CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF THE RENAISSANCE’s Director’s Report, to be submitted for discussion at the Annual Meeting of the Advisory Board, on 9 May 2017. As usual, copies are subsequently distributed for information to colleagues with ex-officio and/or academic interest in the CSR’s activities. General The CSR now coordinates the research interests of over 50 academics, whose work relates to Medieval, Renaissance and Early Modern periods. Colleagues are based in an expanding range of Schools and Departments in the Faculties of Arts and Social Studies: . Classics & Ancient History; . History of Art; . Cross-Faculty Studies; . Modern Languages & Cultures; . Economics; . Theatre, Performance, & Cultural Policy . English & Comparative Literature; Studies; . History; . the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS). The full list of names can be found on our website. A paper version (also available as pdf), updated and circulated in October, can be obtained from our office. During the period under review (April 2016-March 2017), the CSR’s core team consisted of . Director PROF INGRID DE SMET (SMLC, French) (appointed October 2014) . Director of Graduate Studies DR SARAH WOOD (English) (appointed October 2016) . Administrator: MS JAYNE BROWN We continue to receive excellent support from our Subject Librarian (LYNN WRIGHT), our Finance contacts (CHRISTOPHER SWIFT, October 2015-December 2016; SOPHIE MATTHEWS, January 2017-), our colleagues in Research & Impact Services (RIS), especially DR LIESE PERRIN,DAVE DUNCAN,HARRIET HINE, COLETTE KELLY and KATIE KLAASSEN), and our HR contact (AMY ROBINSON). The CSR has warmly welcomed several new arrivals: . former Warwick PhD student DR GIACOMO COMIATI (SMLC, Italian) successfully applied for a three-year RF to work with SIMON GILSON on the ‘Petrarch project’ (more on this CSR project below). DR ALEXANDER RUSSELL has worked on two projects this year, assisting DAVID LINES with the research and compilation of a large Marie Skłodowska-Curie ETN application and as a RF on the Cryfield Grange’ project (see below). DR FELICITA TRAMONTANA joined the CSR in September as a two-year Marie Skłodowska-Curie RF, to work with BEAT KÜMIN on ‘Migration in the early modern world: the Franciscans of the Custody of the Holy Land as a facilitator of the circulation of people in the Mediterranean.’ . a former IAS Fellow, DR SARA TREVISAN re-joined Warwick in May 2016 on a three-year Leverhulme ECF working on ‘The Culture of Royal Genealogy in Early Modern Britain’ (mentors DE SMET & BOTLEY). DR MARCO NIEVERGELT, a specialist in Medieval and Early Modern English and European Literature (especially French and Italian), joined the English department as a Senior Teaching Fellow, to cover for DR CHRISTIANIA WHITEHEAD’s leave. Marco will become the CSR’s DGS in September 2017 for two years. 1 The Department of History was pleased to appoint DR MATTHEW LOCKWOOD as an Assistant Professor in Early Modern British History. Matthew works on the history of crime, criminal justice and the law. History’s Centre for Global History also welcomed Leverhulme ECF DR ADRIANNA CATENA), with a project on ‘The Hatters’ Blues: A Microglobal History of New World Dyes in Early Modern Spain’. Congratulations are also due to: PROF ALISON COOLEY (Classics) on her AHRC Follow-On Funding for ‘Latin inscriptions in the Ashmolean Museum’; to Dr ELIZABETH GOLDRING on her new, non-stipendiary appointment with us as an Honorary Associate Professor; to DR LORENZO PERICOLO on his Robert H. Smith Senior Research Associateship at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC; to DR GIORGIO TAGLIAFERRO (History of Art) on the award of a Leverhulme Research Fellowship; and to DR CHRISTIANIA WHITEHEAD (English) on a three-year grant from the Swiss National Foundation for a project on ‘Region and Nation: Late Medieval Devotion to Northern English Saints’, based at the University of Lausanne. DR CECILIA MURATORI (SMLC, Italian) received a significant buy-out to collaborate on the forthcoming Jacob Böhme exhibition