For diplomats coming to the court of Charles I, it was more than a case of knocking at the door and being shown in. In this Late Summer Lectures podcast, Kimberley Foy uses the experience of visiting ambassadors to show how attending the court of Charles I involved a carefully choreographed set of moves, through particular spaces.
For more information and an accessible transcript, visit our blog.
Rousing the vox populi in James Shirley’s The Politician
Birds and Embodiment in Shelley and Keats
The Autobiographical Pursuit of Happiness in Eighteenth-Century Literature
In Conversation with Jane Smiley
An Evening with T.S. Eliot
Antler
To Hell with Paradise
The Challenges of Researching and Writing Poetry
The Poetry of W.B. Yeats
Celebrating the Brontës
Becoming Sea: A Blurred Lyric of the Ocean
Albion: The Brut Chronicle
Alfred the Great Through History
Tics in the Theatre: The 'Quiet Audience' and the Neurodivergent Spectator
Eugenics in Utopian Literature
When Masters Became Tragic Heroes
(S)he’s just not that into you: Resisting Love in Medieval Romance Literature
Registers of petition in the holograph manuscripts of Thomas Hoccleve
Poet Caroline Bird Speaks to the 98 Percent
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Lit Society: Books and Drama
Ex Libris
Pollyanna
Anne of Green Gables
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Myths and Legends