Emanuel Stelzer is Associate Professor in English Literature. His main research areas are early modern literature and drama, textual studies, and the relationships between visual culture and textuality. He is the author of Portraits in Early Modern English Drama: Visual Culture, Play-Texts, and Performances (Routledge, 2019) and Shakespeare Among Italian Criminologists and Psychiatrists, 1870s-1920s (Skenè. Texts and Studies, 2021). His articles have appeared in international journals such as The Huntington Library Quarterly, Critical Survey, Early Theatre, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, English Studies, and Notes and Queries. His work on the seventeenth-century author William Sampson has been awarded with a ‘Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Seal of Excellence’ and the ‘Centennial Essay Prize’ from the Huntington Library Quarterly. He has also translated into Italian Philip Massinger's The Picture (Aracne, 2017) and John Milton's Comus (ETS, 2020). Dr Stelzer is also managing editor of Skenè: Journal of Theatre and Drama Studies and contributes to YWES (The Year’s Work in English Studies, Oxford University Press).
Modules running in the period selected: 18.
Click on the module to see the timetable and course details.
Di seguito sono elencati gli eventi e gli insegnamenti di Terza Missione collegati al docente:
Topic | Description | Research area |
---|---|---|
Literature and material and visual culture | Literary texts and material and visual culture studies |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Visual Arts & Image Studies |
Mediations of classical mythology in early modern English drama | Mediations of classical mythology in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English drama |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Historical period codes: 1500-1600 |
Early modern paradoxes | Early modern texts belonging to paradoxical genres |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Literature (General): Comparative literature |
Shakespeare | Shakespeare textual criticism |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Shakespeare |
Shakespeare and criminology | The uses of Shakespeare among nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century criminologists |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Shakespeare |
Early modern literature and drama | Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century British literature and drama |
English and Anglophone Literatures
Historical period codes: 1500-1600 |
******** CSS e script comuni siti DOL - frase 9957 ********p>