Michelle O'Callaghan
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+44 (0) 118 378 7003
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Professor
Specialism
Early Modern Literature
Office
EM 109Building location
Edith MorleyAreas of interest
My primary research interest is early modern literature and culture, including print and manuscript culture, literary networks, poetic forms, and women鈥檚 writing.
Teaching
Within the department I convene EN3TBS: The Bloody Stage: Revenge and Death in Renaissance Drama.
I also contribute to the following modules:
EN2EM: Early Modern Texts and Cultures
EN1IDR: Introduction to Drama
Research centres and groups
Early Modern Research CentreResearch projects
I research and publish on a range of topics in early modern literature and culture. I am a specialist in literary networks, material cultures, and poetic forms. My first two books, The Shepheards Nation: Jacobean Spenserians and Early Stuart Political Culture (Oxford, 2000) and The English Wits: Literature and Sociability in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2007), explored how literary texts participated in networked social spaces. For Thomas Middleton, Renaissance Dramatist (Edinburgh, 2007), I turned to drama to study Middleton's inventive use of stagecraft. My most recent monograph, (Cambridge, 2020), extends the study of materiality from books-as-artefacts to their embodiedness - their crafted, performative, recreational and expressive capacities. I am currently co-writing a book with Sarah Ross and Rosalind Smith, Early Modern Women and the Poetry of Complaint, which comes out of my research into poetic forms and women’s writing. Along with Emma Rhatigan and Jackie Watson, I run a seminar series, , which is part of a wider research project that explores the Inn as networked social spaces.
Digital humanities are an ongoing area of research interest for me. I co-edited, with Alice Eardley, a searchable digital edition of selected verse miscellanies printed in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, , and contributed to , along with Sarah Ross, Rosalind Smith, Jake Arthur, and Mitchell Whitelaw.
I am general editor, along with Professor Andrew Hadfield, of the Palgrave Macmillan book series, ‘.
I have supervised dissertations on a range of early modern topics, and welcome enquiries from those interested in pursuing early modern studies at postgraduate level.