Abigail Ann Young (Dr), Associate Editor/ Records of Early English Drama/ Victoria College/ 150 Charles Street W/ Toronto Ontario Canada Phone (416) 585-4504/ FAX (416) 813-4093/ [log in to unmask] List-owner of REED-L <http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/reed-l.html> http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/reed.html => REED's home page http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/stage.html => our theatre resource page http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~young => my home page ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2001 09:52:31 -0800 From: Sean Lawrence <[log in to unmask]> Subject: New issue of EMLS Early Modern Literary Studies (http://purl.oclc.org/emls/emlshome.html) is pleased to announce its January issue, a special issue on women's writing. The table of contents is below. Additionally, in iEMLS's continuing series of reviews of electronic resources for early modern literary studies, Hardy Cook reviews Chadwyck-Healey's Editions and Adaptations of Shakespeare database and John Jowett and Gabriel Egan review Bell & Howell's Early English Books Online. Table of Contents Articles Ann Bowyer's Commonplace Book (Bodleian Library Ashmole MS 51): Reading and Writing Among the Middling Sort. Victoria Burke, University of Ottawa. Translation as Image-Making: Elizabeth I's Translation of Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy. Lysbeth Benkert, Northern State University. The text and attribution of Thou who dost all my thoughts employ: a new Moulsworth poem? Matthew Steggle, Sheffield Hallam University. "But Worth pretends": Discovering Jonsonian Masque in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus. Anita M. Hagerman, Southwest Missouri State University. An Apology for Knowledge: Gender and the Hermeneutics of Incarnation in the Works of Aemilia Lanyer and Sor Juana Inis de la Cruz. B. R. Siegfried, Brigham Young University. The Wreck of Order in Early Modern Women's Drama. Irene Burgess, Wheeling Jesuit University. Outrage your face: Anti-Theatricality and Gender in Early Modern Closet Drama by Women. Katherine O. Acheson, University of Waterloo. Resources Women Writers Online: An Evaluation and Annotated Bibliography of Web Resources. Georgianna Ziegler, Folger Shakespeare Library. Chawton House Library: Transforming the Literary Landscape. Michael Wheeler, Chawton House Library. The Perdita Project--A Winter's Report. Jill Seal, The Nottingham Trent University. Alison Findlay, Stephanie Hodgson-Wright and Gweno Williams, Women Dramatists 1550-1670: Plays in Performance. Lancaster University Television, 1999. Lisa Hopkins, Sheffield Hallam University. An Interview with Germaine Greer. Joan Fitzpatrick, University College Northampton. Note: A note on Hamlet's illegitimacy identifying a source of the dram of eale speech (Q2 1.4.17-38). Steve Sohmer, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA. There is also the usual complement of reviews and theatre reviews.