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Folger Fellows

Blog posts written by or about Folger fellows
Announcing a New Folger Fellowship in Honor of Margaret Hannay
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Announcing a New Folger Fellowship in Honor of Margaret Hannay

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Amanda Herbert Georgianna Ziegler

We’re proud to announce the creation of a new fellowship at the Folger Shakespeare Library. In partnership with the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women, the Folger Institute will offer a fellowship to scholars working on studies of…

The Amherst-Folger Fellows
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The Amherst-Folger Fellows

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Owen Williams

As readers of The Collation know, the Folger welcomes scholars on fellowship, Folger Institute program participants, and individual readers to our reading rooms. But what our readers may not know is that each January, we open our doors to a…

Doodles and Dragons
detail of drawings, showing the foppishly dressed man
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Doodles and Dragons

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Gail McMurray Gibson

A guest post by Gail McMurray Gibson, William R. Kenan Professor Emerita of English and Humanities, Davidson College. When the Macro Plays manuscript pages recently came out of the Folger vault for a day of conversation with scholars, curators, and…

“Beloveed Plays”: A Sammelband of 1680s Quartos & Its Readers
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“Beloveed Plays”: A Sammelband of 1680s Quartos & Its Readers

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Claire M. L. Bourne

A Guest Post by Claire M. L. Bourne A major fringe benefit of systematically going through so many books (1,300+) at the Folger last year, looking for typographic conventions and experiments, was encountering traces of use and reading that have…

"This Play I Red" and other marginal notes on reading
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"This Play I Red" and other marginal notes on reading

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Claire M. L. Bourne

A guest post by Claire M. L. Bourne As a long-term fellow at the Folger Shakespeare Library this year, I have been surveying all the English playbooks in the collection—from 1500 to 1709—in order to understand changing conventions of dramatic…

Interiority and Jane Porter’s pocket diary
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Interiority and Jane Porter’s pocket diary

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Julie Park

A guest post by Julie Park It’s been a critical commonplace after Ian Watt’s The Rise of the Novel to view the novel as the first literary form to represent psychological individuality in the context of everyday life. My research,…

Extensions of the book
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Extensions of the book

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Daniel Shore

Working in the Folger Shakespeare Library over the past eight months, I’ve felt some dissonance between the rich physical resources of the Library and the digital focus of my book project, Cyberformalism, which explores…

Q & A: Carol Brobeck, Fellowships Administrator
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Q & A: Carol Brobeck, Fellowships Administrator

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The Collation

title page of The Mariners Mirrour Anyone who has been a Fellow at the Folger Shakespeare Library can attest to the central role that Carol Brobeck plays as the Fellowships Administrator in making their work possible. She has also worked…

“What’s that letter?”: Searching for water amongst the leaves
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“What’s that letter?”: Searching for water amongst the leaves

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Lehua Yim

A guest post by Folger Institute participant and short-term fellow Lehua Yim Sixteenth-century England was particularly formative in the long history of what “Britain” means for the peoples of that archipelago, as reformulations of political, legal, economic, and religious institutions…

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