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.
The Stream of Consciousness in William Wordsworth and James Joyce
The Geographic and Linguistic Identity of the American Midwest
Inscribing Identities in Childhood and Deathbed Scenes
Beginnings and Endings in Ovid’s Metamorphoses
Shakespeare, Henry VIII, and the day the Globe burned down
Classical Music, Conflict, and Identity in the Contemporary Novel
Snake Women: Crafting Power in Medieval Origin Stories
A Short History of Interactive Narratives
Dickens's Ghosts: An Altered Perspective
Rachael Boast on the Language and Sound of Poetry
Brexit and the Democratic Intellect
Will Harris on Becoming a Poet
Future Memory and Circular Time in Charles Dickens' 'The Signal-Man'
The Classical Underworld as a Memoryscape
Polly Atkin on the Places of Her Poetry
Time and Place: Bakhtin and Shakespeare
JL Williams on the Origins of Her Poetry
Wandering Across Scandinavia in Egils Saga
Gillian Allnutt on a Life in Poetry
Sounds Unreal
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Lit Society: Books and Drama
Ex Libris
Write The Book: Conversations on Craft
Great Expectations
Pride and Prejudice
Fresh Air
Myths and Legends