Renaissance Moving Pictures

From Sidney's Funeral materials to Collaborative, Multimedia Nachleben

Come hear us talk about the creation and significance of our multimedia website dedicated to the funeral procession of Sir Philip Sidney, which took place in London, England in 1587. With a panoply of visual, poetic, and musical records, the funeral survives as one of the most thoroughly documented Elizabethan public events, and the distribution of the funeral ephemera to the public made it possible for Sidney's contemporaries to recreate simulacra of the funeral in their own parlors. We will discuss why and how we have 're-done' this famous courtier-poet's obsequies, hopefully giving inspiration and insight to those of you who would like to direct similar projects. Extensive collaborative work, interdisciplinary and interinstitutional cooperation, and contributions from both grad and undergrad students have enabled us to create a project with both scholarly and pedagogical value on a low budget and with gusto.

Speakers

Elizabeth Bearden
Assistant ProfessorEnglish DepartmentUniversity of Maryland

Bearden is working on a book entitled "Emblematics of the Self: Ekphrasis and Identity in Renaissance Imitations of Greek romance," has published work in PMLA, and has a forthcoming article in JEMCS. Having received her Ph. D. in Comparative Literature at NYU, she was hired at Maryland in 2006. Her research and teaching interests include early modern poetry and prose, the reception of antiquity in the Renaissance, word-image studies, Anglo-Spanish relations, transnationalism in romance, and the ways in which genre systems can reveal links between aesthetics and ethics in the early modern period.

Stephanie Clarke-Graham
PhD CandidateDepartment of EnglishUniversity of Maryland

Clarke-Graham is in her third year of the doctoral program in the Dept. of English. She intends to explore Early Modern English representations of the spaces of the Middle East and North Africa in her dissertation.

Elizabeth Martin
Ph.D. CandidateEnglish DepartmentUniversity of Maryland

Martin is a doctoral candidate specializing in late medieval and Renaissance literature. Her dissertation focuses on the development of the romance genre across these periods.

Michael Quilligan
PhD CandidateEnglish DepartmentUniversity of Maryland

Quilligan is in his first year of the English Ph.D. program. His research focuses on romanticism, and he is the co-site manager for Romantic Circles, a refereed scholarly Website devoted to the study of Romantic-period literature and culture.