Bernhard Klein Publications 1. Monographs On the Uses of History in Recent Irish Writing (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007) Maps and the Writing of Space in Early Modern England and Ireland (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2001) 2. Edited collections Sea Changes. Historicizing the Ocean (New York and London: Routledge, 2004) Das Meer als kulturelle Kontaktzone: Räume, Reisende, Repräsentationen, Reihe Konflikte und Kultur: Historische Perspektiven (Constance: University Press, 2003) Kulturwissenschaften in der Anglistik—Eine Standortbestimmung, Proceedings, http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/britcult/DOTagungInhalt.htm (2003) Fictions of the Sea. Critical Perspectives on the Ocean in British Literature and Culture (Aldershot et al.: Ashgate, 2002) Common Ground? Crossovers between Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Studies (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2001) Literature, Mapping, and the Politics of Space in Early Modern Britain (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001; republished in paperback 2011) 3. Essays, articles, book chapters, encyclopedia entries “Camões and the Sea: Maritime Modernity in The Lusiads”, Modern Philology 111, no. 2 (2013), 158-80. “‘Stuff Happens’: David Hare and Verbatim Theatre”, Marie Hologa et al. (eds), Cases of Intervention: The Great Variety of British Cultural Studies (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2013), 207-22. “‘To pot straight way we goe’: Robert Baker in Guinea, 1563-4”, Daniel Carey and Claire Jowitt (eds), Richard Hakluyt and Collected Travel Writing in Early Modern Europe (Aldershot: Ashgate, for The Hakluyt Society, 2012), 243-55. “Der Ort des Meeres in der Frühen Neuzeit”, Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 148 (2012), 91- 111. “William Camden”, The Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature, vol. 1, ed. Alan Stewart and Garrett Sullivan (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), 140-5. “Mapping the Waters: Sea Charts, Navigation, and Camões’s Os Lusíadas”, Renaissance Studies 25, no. 2 (2011), 228-47. “The Overseas Voyage in Early Modern English Writing”, Margaret and Tom Healy (eds), Renaissance Transformations: The Making of English Writing, 1500-1650 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009), 128-42. 1 “Tamburlaine und der Raum des Sakralen: Weltkarten, Körperbilder und Globalisierungsfantasien in der Frühen Neuzeit”, Felicitas Schmieder et al. (eds), Ansicht-Einsicht-Aufsicht: Neue Perspektiven auf die Kartographie in Mittelalter und Früher Neuzeit (Berlin: trafo verlag, 2009), 117-37. “Tamburlaine, Sacred Space, and the Heritage of Medieval Cartography”, David Matthews and Gordon McMullan (eds), Reading the Medieval in Early Modern England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 143-58. “‘We are not pirates’: Piracy and Navigation in The Lusiads”, Claire Jowitt (ed.), Pirates? The Politics of Plunder 1550-1650 (Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2006), 105-17. “‘The Natural Home of Englishmen’: Froude’s Oceana and the Writing of the Sea”, Robert Burden and Stephan Kohl (eds), Landscape and Englishness (Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi, 2006), 103-22. “Regieren nach dem Sündenfall: Henry IV, Part 1”, essay in William Shakespeare, King Henry IV, Part 1 / König Heinrich der Vierte, erster Teil, German trans. Frank Günther (Cadolzburg: ars vivendi, 2004), 316-33. (with Gesa Mackenthun) “Introduction: The Sea Is History”, Bernhard Klein and Gesa Mackenthun (eds), Sea Changes. Historicizing the Ocean (New York and London: Routledge, 2004), 1-12. “Staying Afloat. Literary Shipboard Encounters from Shakespeare to Equiano”, Bernhard Klein and Gesa Mackenthun (eds), Sea Changes. Historicizing the Ocean (New York and London: Routledge, 2004), 91-109. (with Gesa Mackenthun) “Einleitung: Das Meer als kulturelle Kontaktzone”, Bernhard Klein and Gesa Mackenthun (eds), Das Meer als kulturelle Kontaktzone: Räume, Reisende, Repräsentationen, Reihe Konflikte und Kultur (Constance: University Press, 2003), 1-16. “Randfiguren. Othello, Oroonoko und die kartographische Repräsentation Afrikas”, Ina Schabert and Michaela Boenke (eds), Imaginationen des Anderen im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert, Wolfenbütteler Forschungen 97 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2002), 185-216. “Introduction: Britain and the Sea”, Bernhard Klein (ed.), Fictions of the Sea. Critical Perspectives on the Ocean in British Literature and Culture (Aldershot et al.: Ashgate, 2002), 1-12. “‘Tales of Iron Wars’: Shakespeare and the Uncommon Soldier”, Barbara Korte and Ralf Schneider (eds), War and the Cultural Construction of Identities in Britain (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2002), 93-107. Entries on Louis MacNeice, Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon and Tom Paulin, in: Eberhard Kreutzer and Ansgar Nünning (eds), Metzler Lexikon englischsprachiger Autorinnen und Autoren (Stuttgart: Metzler, 2002) (with Jürgen Kramer) “Introduction”, Bernhard Klein and Jürgen Kramer (eds), Common Ground? Crossovers between Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Studies (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2001), 1-6. (with Tobias Döring) “Of Bogs and Oceans: Alternative Histories in Seamus Heaney and Derek Walcott”, Bernhard Klein and Jürgen Kramer (eds), Common Ground? Crossovers between Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Studies (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2001), 113-36. “The Poetry and Politics of Memory: Staging History in Contemporary Irish Drama (Friel, Parker, McGuinness)”, Jürgen Schlaeger and Peter Lucko (eds), Anglistentag 2000: Proceedings (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2001), 421-34. 2 (with Andrew Gordon) “Introduction”, Andrew Gordon and Bernhard Klein (eds), Literature, Mapping, and the Politics of Space in Early Modern Britain (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 1-12. “Imaginary Journeys: Spenser, Drayton, and the Poetics of National Space”, Andrew Gordon and Bernhard Klein (eds), Literature, Mapping, and the Politics of Space in Early Modern Britain (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 204-23. “Die unendliche Vielfalt der Welt: Antony and Cleopatra”, essay in William Shakespeare, Antonius und Kleopatra / Antony and Cleopatra, German trans. Frank Günther (Cadolzburg: ars vivendi, 2000), 352-75. [Reissued in paperback by Deutscher Taschenbuchverlag, Munich (2003)] “Der Wille zum Wortspiel: Love’s Labour’s Lost”, essay in William Shakespeare, Verlorene Liebesmüh / Love’s Labour’s Lost, German trans. Frank Günther (Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuchverlag, 2000) 317-37. [Reissued in hardback by ars vivendi, Cadolzburg (2000)] “Einleitung: England in der Frühen Neuzeit”, Ina Schabert (ed.), Shakespeare- Handbuch (Stuttgart: Kröner, fourth rev. ed., 2000; fifth ed., 2009), 2-47. (with Ina Habermann) “Shakespeare: Die Historien”, Ina Schabert (ed.), Shakespeare-Handbuch (Stuttgart: Kröner, fourth rev. ed., 2000; fifth ed., 2009), 324-80. “‘Proportion Geometricall hath no man opprest’: The Politics of Estate Surveying in Early Modern England”, Wolfgang Riedel (ed.), Narratives of Nature. Perspectives of Cultural Construction (Essen: Die Blaue Eule, 1999), 77-94. “‘The Whole Empire of Great Britain’. Zur Konstruktion nationalen Raums in Geographie und Kartographie”, Ulrich Bielefeld and Gisela Engel (eds), Bilder der Nation. Kulturelle und politische Konstruktionen des Nationalen am Beginn der europäischen Moderne (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1998), 40-75. “Partial Views: Shakespeare and the Map of Ireland”, Early Modern Literary Studies, special issue “Literature and Geography”, ed. Richard Helgerson and Joanne Woolway, vol. 4 (1998), URL: http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/04-2/kleipart.htm “Constructing the Space of the Nation: Geography, Maps, and the Discovery of Britain in the Early Modern Period”, Journal for the Study of British Cultures, thematic issue “The Discovery of Britain”, ed. Manfred Pfister, vol. 4 (1997), nos 1-2, 11-29. “The Lie of the Land: English Surveyors, Irish Rebels and The Faerie Queene”, Irish University Review, special issue “Spenser in Ireland, 1596-1996”, ed. Anne Fogarty, vol. 26 (1996), no. 2, 207-25. “‘Utterly another people’: Konstruktionen kultureller Differenz im Irland der frühen Neuzeit”, Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, no. 3 (1996), 249-65. “English Cartographers and the Mapping of Ireland in the Early Modern Period”. Journal for the Study of British Cultures, thematic issue “Regional Cultures: The Difference Between”, ed. Christopher Harvie, vol. 2 (1995), no. 2, 115-39. “‘And quickly make that, which was nothing, all’: English National Identity and the Mapping of Ireland”, Mitteilungen des Zentrums zur Erforschung der Frühen Neuzeit, special issue “Nationalismus und Subjektivität”, ed. Klaus Reichert, vol. 2 (1995), 100-25. “‘Lorde how quicklye dothe that country alter mens natures’: Aspekte kultureller Instabilität im Irlandbild Edmund Spensers”, Mitteilungen des Zentrums zur Erforschung der Frühen Neuzeit, vol. 1 (1994), no. 2, 133-55. 3 4. Forthcoming “Maps and Material Culture”, Catherine Richardson and Tara Hamling (eds), Research Companion to Early Modern Material Culture (Aldershot: Ashgate), expected 2016 “The Sea in Pericles”, Ina Habermann and Michelle Witen (eds), Shakespeare and Space (Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan), expected 2016 “Antony and Cleopatra”, Michael Neill and David Schalkwyk (eds), Oxford Handbook on Shakespearean Tragedy (Oxford: Oxford University Press), expected 2016 (with Richmond Barbour) “Drama at Sea: Another Look at Shakespeare in Sierra Leone, 1607”, Claire Jowitt and David McInnis (eds), Travel and Drama in the English Renaissance (Oxford: Oxford University Press), expected 2016 “Oroonoko and the Mapping of Africa”, Jorge Bastos da Silva and Miguel Ramalhete Gomes (eds), Ex certa scientia: English Literature and the Disciplines of Knowledge, Early Modern to Eighteenth Century, expected 2016 5. In progress Edition (co-editor Steve Mentz) of Richard Hakluyt, “Travels to the Levant and West Africa”, volume 7 of the first critical edition of The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation (1598-1600), 14 vols, general editors Claire Jowitt, Daniel Carey (Oxford University Press), scheduled for 2016-8 Edited collection (with Steve Mentz) on early modern drama and the sea, expected submission date 2015 “Fish Walking on Land: Place, Space, and the Early Modern Sea”, essay (c. 7,000 words) for Renaissance Studies special issue on “Early Modern Water”, scheduled to appear in 2016 Essay on Michael Drayton’s Poly-Olbion, commissioned by Andrew McRae and Philip Schwyzer (University of Exeter) in conjunction with the AHRC-funded new critical edition of Poly-Olbion Essay on early English travel to Africa for collection emerging from NMM conference The Emergence of a Maritime Nation: Britain in the Tudor and Stuart Age, 1485 to 1714, ed. James Davey, expected 2017/8 6. Translations Four essays (English into German) in Bernhard Klein and Gesa Mackenthun (eds), Das Meer als kulturelle Kontaktzone: Räume, Reisende, Repräsentationen, Reihe Konflikte und Kultur: Historische Perspektiven (Constance: University Press, 2003): Greg Dening, “Tiefe Räume, tiefe Zeiten: Die Zivilisierung der See” (17-47) Deryck Holdsworth and Henry J. Rademacher, “Worte und Welten des Handels: Die Kulturgeographie maritimer Räume” (115-42) Yasuo Endo, “Das Meer als Daitoyo: Das Konzept des Pazifik aus japanischer Sicht, 1660-1860” (199-222) Peter Hulme, “Schiffbrüchig: Die äußersten Ränder der Erde” (319-36) 4 7. Editorial Reviews editor, Journal for the Study of British Cultures (2002-2007) 8. Reviews Review of Sebastian Sobecki (ed.), The Sea and Englishness in the Middle Ages: Maritime Narratives, Identity, and Culture (Cambridge, UK: D.S. Brewer, 2011), in: International Journal of Maritime History 24, no 1 (2012), 434-5. Review of Sebastian Sobecki, The Sea and Medieval English Literature (Cambridge, UK: D.S. Brewer, 2008), in: International Journal of Maritime History 21, no 1 (2009), 362-3. Review of Christian Jacob, The Sovereign Map. Theoretical Approaches in Cartography throughout History, trans. Tom Conley (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2006), in: Textual Practice 22, no 4 (2008), 791-4. Review of Henry Turner, The English Renaissance Stage. Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts, 1580-1630 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 144 (2008), 257-8. Review of Andrew Hadfield, Shakespeare and Republicanism, in: Shakespeare- Jahrbuch 143 (2007), 263-5. Review of Bernd Brunner, The Ocean at Home. An Illustrated History of the Acquarium, and Helen M. Rozwadowski, Fathoming the Ocean: The Discovery and Exploration of the Deep Sea, in: Victorian Studies 48, no. 4 (2006), 709-11. Review of Alethea Hayter, The Wreck of the Abergavenny: The Wordsworths and Catastrophe, in: International Journal of Maritime History 17 (2006), no. 1, 387-8. Review of Philip Steinberg, The Social Construction of the Ocean, in: Journal for the Study of British Cultures 12 (2005), no. 2, 184-6. Review of Philippa Berry and Margaret Trudeau-Clayton (eds), Textures of Renaissance Knowledge; Gordon Campbell (ed.), The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance, in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 141 (2005), 267-9. Review of Russell West, Spatial Representations and the Jacobean Stage. From Shakespeare to Webster, in: Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik 52 (2004), no. 2, 191-4. Review of Terence Hawkes, Shakespeare in the Present, in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 140 (2004), 313-14. Review of Marcus Wood, Blind Memory. Visual Representations of Slavery in England and America, 1780-1865; Peter Middleton and Tim Woods, Literatures of Memory. History, Time and Space in Postwar Writing, in: Journal for the Study of British Cultures 10, no 1 (2003), 135-8. Review of Richard Helgerson, Adulterous Alliances. Home, State, and History in Early Modern European Drama and Painting, in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 139 (2003), 306-8. Review of Ian McBride (ed.), History and Memory in Modern Ireland; Claire Connolly (ed.), Theorizing Ireland, in: Journal for the Study of British Cultures 9, no 2 (2002), 227-30. Review of Alistair Davies and Alan Sinfield (eds), British Culture of the Postwar, in: Journal for the Study of British Cultures 9, no 1 (2002), 105-107. 5 “Dramatic Social Change” [Review of Garrett Sullivan, The Drama of Landscape; Theodore Leinwand, Theatre, Finance and Society in Early Modern England], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 137 (2001), 241-4. Review of Pat Rogers, The Text of Great Britain, in: Anglia 118, no 4 (2000), 624-6. Review of Andrew Murphy, But the Irish Sea Betwixt Us, in: Anglia 118, no 3 (2000), 458-61. Review of David Jarrett et al. (eds), Writing Places and Mapping Words. Readings in British Cultural Studies; Jana Ciglar-Zanic et al. (eds), British Cultural Studies, in: Journal for the Study of British Cultures 6, no 1 (1999), 100-2, 103-4. “Identität und Krise in Irland: Spenser, Shakespeare and ‘the Salvage Island’” [Review of Andrew Hadfield, Spenser’s Irish Experience; Christopher Highley, Shakespeare, Spenser, and the Crisis in Ireland; David Baker, Between Nations; Willy Maley, Salvaging Spenser], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 135 (1999), 244-52. Review of Jean-Pierre Maquerlot und Michèle Willems (eds), Travel and Drama in Shakespeare’s Time, in: Early Modern Literary Studies 4, no 2 (1998), URL: http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/04-2/rev_ klei.html Review of Andrew McRae, God Speed the Plough, in: Anglia 116, no 3 (1998), 419-21. “Paper Landscapes: Maps, Texts, and the Construction of Space, 1500-1700” [Conference report], in: Anglistik 9, no 1 (1998), 193-6. “Shakespeare am Puls der Zeit” [Review of Eric Mallin, Inscribing the Time; Claire McEachern, The Poetics of English Nationhood; John Joughin (ed.), Shakespeare and National Culture], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 134 (1998), 249-53. “Shakespeare and Ireland” [Conference report], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 134 (1998), 330-31. Review of Lawrence Manley, Literature and Culture in Early Modern London, in: Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, no. 3 (1997), 263-4. “Shakespeare und Geographie” [Review of John Gillies, Shakespeare and the Geography of Difference; Jeanne Addison Roberts, The Shakespearean Wild; Frank Lestringant, Mapping the Renaissance World; Denis Wood, The Power of Maps], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 133 (1997), 271-7. “Konstruktionen des Nationalen” [Review of Richard Helgerson, Forms of Nationhood; Andrew Hadfield, Literature, Politics and National Identity; Annabel Patterson, Reading Holinshed’s Chronicles], in: Shakespeare-Jahrbuch 132 (1996), 233-8. 6 Bernhard Klein Conferences, lectures, papers, seminars 1. Conferences and panels organised Translating the Early Modern, fourth annual TEEME conference (University of Kent in Paris, 2015) Contemplating Early Modernities: Concept, Content & Context, third annual TEEME conference (Free University Berlin, 2014) Between Words and Worlds: Texts and Contexts in the Early Modern World, second annual TEEME conference (Charles University in Prague, 2013) Presenting the Past: Exploring the Relationship between Text and Event in Early Modern Europe, first annual TEEME conference (University of Porto, 2012) Multitudinous Seas: The Ocean in the Age of Shakespeare, panel (with Steve Mentz), 9th World Shakespeare Congress (Charles University in Prague, 2011) New Perspectives on European Romanticism, symposium (with Stephen Prickett) (Reid Hall, University of Kent at Paris, 2010) Colonial Memory: British Perspectives, panel, ASNEL conference [Association for the Study of New Literatures in English] (University of Frankfurt, 2004) Kulturwissenschaften in der Anglistik. Eine Standortbestimmung (University of Dortmund, 2003) Common Ground? Crossovers between Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Studies, 11th British and Cultural Studies Conference (University of Dortmund, 2000) Sea Changes. Historicizing the Ocean, c. 1500 - c. 1900 (University of Greifswald, 2000) Paper Landscapes: Maps, Texts, and the Construction of Space, 1500-1700 (Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, 1997) 2. Upcoming events 23-26 March 2016 (New Orleans): research paper, panel on “Space, Memory and Transformation in Early Modern Literature”, Shakespeare Association of America annual conference (invited paper) 3. Papers and seminars given 10 September 2015 (London): “Poly-Olbion and ‘those Rough Gods of the Sea’”, conference Poly-Olbion and the Writing of Britain (Royal Geographical Society, London), organized by University of Exeter 24 July 2015 (London): Keynote address, conference The Emergence of a Maritime Nation: Britain in the Tudor and Stuart Age, 1485–1714 (National Maritime Museum, London) 10 June 2015 (Porto): invited research paper, conference Connected Oceans: New Avenues of Research in Oceans and Maritime History 7 28 March 2015 (Berlin): invited research paper, ‘Bilderfahrzeuge’ project (Warburg Institute), annual conference of Renaissance Society of America 19 February 2015 (Paris): invited paper on the TEEME programme, British Embassy, Paris 6 November 2014 (Munich): keynote address, conference Epic Knowledge (Centre for Advanced Study, LMU Munich) 27 March 2014 (New York): invited research paper, annual conference of Renaissance Society of America 3 June 2013 (Paris): paper on TEEME, workshop on international reserachers’ mobility, British Council / Association Bernard Gregory 3 May 2013 (Oxford): invited paper, Text and Topos: an Interdisciplinary Conference on Literature and the Environment 14 March 2013 (Huelva): “Early English Travel to Guinea, 1553-1590”, conference Charting Early Modern Culture: Seascapes, Landscapes, Mindscapes, 24th SEDERI annual meeting (Spanish and Portuguese Society for English Renaissance Studies), Universiy of Huelva (Spain) 13-15 December 2012 (Porto): keynote address, “Marginal Figures: Othello, Oroonoko, and the Mapping of Africa”, Relational Forms II: Ex certa scientia: Literature, Science and the Arts, University of Porto 29 November 2012 (Kent): research paper, Centre for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, School of English, University of Kent 15 November 2012 (Porto): keynote address, “Sea-birds at the Cape of Storms, 1497”, First annual TEEME conference (Text and Event in Early Modern Europe), University of Porto 31 October 2012 (Basel): invited lecture on “Shakespeare and the Sea”, lecture series Shakespearean Dimensions, University of Basel, Switzerland 27 October 2012 (London): invited research paper, Transforming Early Modern Identities, King’s College, London 6 July 2012 (Würzburg): research paper, University of Würzburg 1 July 2012 (London): roundtable discussion, Renaissance Old Worlds: English Encounters from the Levant to the Far East, The British Library 22 June 2012 (Berlin): invited research paper, In Africa and Beyond: Historical and Cultural Constructions of the Sea, Humboldt University 11 May 2012 (Warwick): invited research paper, Maritime Britain: Histories and Fictions, 1550-1800, University of Warwick 5 April 2012 (Boston): research paper for panel on “Oceanic Shakespeares”, 40th annual meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America 20-21 June 2011 (Washington DC): two-day seminar, “Imagining Boundaries: Nation and Plantation”, NEH-funded Folger Summer Shakespeare Institute for College Teachers, inivitation of Folger Shakespeare Library 14 May 2011 (Nottingham): research paper, “Early Modern Water” symposium, events series Engagements with Nature, convened by “Landscape, Space, Place Research Group”, University of Nottingham 21 April 2011 (Providence, Rhode Island): keynote lecture, conference The Hungry Ocean: Literary Culture and the Maritime Environment, John Carter Brown Library 1 October 2010 (Kiel): keynote lecture, panel “Heterotopic Spaces: Ships”, conference Images of Coast and Sea: Navigating Cultural Spaces, University of Kiel (Germany) 8 2 July 2010 (Frankfurt): research paper, “Defoe and Landscape”, University of Frankfurt 2 June 2010 (London): Birkbeck summer lecture, Birkbeck College, University of London 23 April 2010 (Porto): research paper on Hakluyt, conference ‘Ports, and piers and roads’: Self and World in Early Modern Culture, SEDERI annual meeting (Spanish and Portuguese Society for English Renaissance Studies), Universiy of Porto 15 April 2010 (Lisbon): keynote lecture, conference Geographies of the Self, APEAA (Associação portuguesa de estudos anglo-americanos), Universidade Aberta, Lisbon 15 January 2010 (Newcastle): keynote lecture, “Place, Space, and the Early Modern Sea”, conference Early Modern (Dis)Locations, Northumbria University 26 June 2009 (Exeter): invited research paper “Cultural Histories of the Sea: Historicizing the Early Modern Ocean”, Centre for Maritime Historical Studies, University of Exeter 18 June 2009 (Berne): keynote, “Beach Encounters: Early Modern Europeans on African Shores”, conference ‘‘‘Twixt Land and Sea’: The Beach in Literature, Film and Cultural Theory”, University of Berne, Switzerland 10 May 2009 (Berlin): “Shakespeare Before Orientalism: Hamlet in Sierra Leone, 1607 – A Debate” (with Richmond Barbour), conference “Before Orientalism: Early Modern Anglo-Ottoman Encounters”, Free University of Berlin 29 January 2009 (Canterbury): research paper, MEMS open seminar series (Medieval and Early Modern Studies), University of Kent 15 May 2008 (London): “Hakluyt and West Africa: Robert Baker’s Voyages to Guinea, 1562 and 1563”, conference on “Richard Hakluyt: Life, Times, Legacy”, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich 15 March 2008 (Dallas): research paper for panel on “London and Beyond: Foreign Traffic on the English Stage”, 36th annual meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America 12 February 2008 (Sussex): invited research paper, open seminar series, English Department, University of Sussex 19 January 2008 (London): invited research paper, London Renaissance Seminar on “Colonialism and Travel”, Birkbeck College 12 July 2007 (London): “Early Modern European Voyagers in the Indian Ocean”, 2nd IOCIC colloquium (Indian Ocean Cultures in Contact), School of Oriental and African Studies 10/11 January 2007 (Rostock): invited research paper followed by colloquium, post- graduate programme (Graduiertenkolleg) “Cultural Encounters and the Discourses of Scholarship”, University of Rostock 28 November 2006 (Cornwall): invited lecture, “The Body in the World: Tamburlaine, Sacred Space, and the Heritage of Medieval Cartography”, University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, English Department Research Seminar 7 September 2006 (Frankfurt): invited lecture, “Mapping the Waters: Sea Charts, Navigation, and Camões’s Lusiads”, conference, New Perspectives on Cartography, Centre for Research into Early Modern Culture, University of Frankfurt 29 March 2006 (Manchester): invited research paper, English and American studies research seminar, University of Manchester 6 Februar 2006 (London): invited research paper, English Department Research Seminar, King’s College, London 9 12 July 2005 (Fremantle): “Towards a Cultural History of the Early Modern Ocean: Encountering Africa in European Texts”, conference, Middle Passages. The Oceanic Voyage as Social Process, The Maritime Museum of Western Australia 15 May 2005 (Gregynog): “‘We are not pirates’: Piracy and Navigation in The Lusiads”, conference, Pirates! Plunderers at Sea in the Age of Empire, 1550-1650, University of Wales 12 May 2005 (Porto): “Camões and the Sea: A Perspective from outside Portugal”, University of Porto, Portugal 29 April 2005 (Stanford): invited lecture, “Testing the Waters: Camões, The Lusiads, and Maritime Modernity”, conference, The Maritime in Modernity, Stanford University 24 March 2005 (Essex): “Testing the Waters: Camões, The Lusiads, and Maritime Modernity”, Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies, University of Essex, open research seminar 5 March 2005 (Warwick): invited lecture, “The Body in the World: Sacred Space, Cartography, and Marlowe’s Tamburlaine”, conference, Thinking Space in Early Modern England, Humanities Research Centre, University of Warwick 10 February 2005 (London): Graduate Lecture on James Anthony Froude’s Oceana: England and Her Colonies, School of English, Birkbeck College, University of London 8 September 2004 (Zaragoza): “‘The Natural Home of Englishmen’: Froude’s Oceana and the Writing of the Sea”, 7th ESSE conference [European Society for the Study of English] 14 May 2004 (Vienna): “Ireland and the Single Woman. Gender and Nationality in the Work of Eavan Boland and Marina Carr”, lecture, University of Vienna 13 February 2004 (Berlin): invited lecture, “Sea Changes. Shakespeare and the Maritime Imaginary”, conference, Metamorphosis. Structures of Cultural Transformations, Centre for British Studies, Humboldt-University, Berlin 15 December 2003 (Dortmund): “Cultural Encounters at Sea: Historicizing the Ocean in the Early Modern Period”, inaugural lecture [Antrittsvorlesung Privatdozent], University of Dortmund 27 November 2003 (Essex): “Shakespeare and the Sea—Work in Progress”, research seminar, Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies, University of Essex 24 June 2003 (Dresden): “Shakespeare at Sea: Hamlet in Africa, 1607”, lecture, University of Dresden 5 June 2003 (Porto): “Shakespeare at Sea”, conference, Gloriana’s Rule: The Life, Literature and Culture of Elizabethan England, Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Porto, Portugal 10 May 2003 (Göttingen): “A Postcolonial Ocean. Slavery and the Sea in Recent British Novels”, lecture, University of Göttingen 28 February 2003 (Belfast): “The Ship as Heterotopia: Historicizing the Ocean in 1493”, lecture, Queen’s University, Belfast 21 February 2003 (Frankfurt): “‘The Sea Is History’: Recent British Maritime Fiction”, lecture, University of Frankfurt 23 January 2003 (Mainz): “‘Dusky Phantoms’: Indigenous Seafarers in British and American Maritime Writing”, lecture, University of Mainz 10
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