This thesis is concerned with how we read, edit, and understand the socio-textual relationships between seventeenth-century literary manuscripts. It takes as its subject William Strode (1601?-1645), poet, preacher, and Public Orator of the University of Oxford. In particular, this study examines the transmission and reception of Strode’s English verse, predominantly by examining verse miscellanies of the 1620s, 1630s and 1640s. Chapter 1 provides the most extensive account of Strode's life to date, situating his career as a manuscript-publishing poet alongside his academic and clerical careers and social and literary contexts. Chapter 2 studies Strode's autograph manuscripts in detail, focusing on an autograph notebook, in which Strode tran...
The importance of manuscript sources for certain types of poetry in the 1580s and 1590s has only slo...
This thesis investigates the conception and development of an English literary canon across the mid-...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
This thesis is concerned with how we read, edit, and understand the socio-textual relationships betw...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
My doctoral thesis, "Producing Piers Plowman to 1475: Author, Scribe, and Reader," charts a new mate...
This dissertation examines four single-witness manuscripts, written in English, dating from between ...
My doctoral thesis, "Producing Piers Plowman to 1475: Author, Scribe, and Reader," charts a new mate...
This dissertation examines four single-witness manuscripts, written in English, dating from between ...
This thesis is the first complete study of the nine Latin eclogues of Giles Fletcher the Elder (1546...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis examines the manuscript poems of Thomas St Nicholas (bap. 1602, d. 1668). His poetry is ...
The importance of manuscript sources for certain types of poetry in the 1580s and 1590s has only slo...
This thesis investigates the conception and development of an English literary canon across the mid-...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
This thesis is concerned with how we read, edit, and understand the socio-textual relationships betw...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
My doctoral thesis, "Producing Piers Plowman to 1475: Author, Scribe, and Reader," charts a new mate...
This dissertation examines four single-witness manuscripts, written in English, dating from between ...
My doctoral thesis, "Producing Piers Plowman to 1475: Author, Scribe, and Reader," charts a new mate...
This dissertation examines four single-witness manuscripts, written in English, dating from between ...
This thesis is the first complete study of the nine Latin eclogues of Giles Fletcher the Elder (1546...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This thesis examines the manuscript poems of Thomas St Nicholas (bap. 1602, d. 1668). His poetry is ...
The importance of manuscript sources for certain types of poetry in the 1580s and 1590s has only slo...
This thesis investigates the conception and development of an English literary canon across the mid-...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...