Emma Smith
Academic Position:
CUF Lecturer and Tutorial Fellow
Research Interests:
Early Modern
Emma Smith's research focuses on the reception of Shakespeare in print, on stage, and in criticism. Her Shakespeare’s First Folio: Four Centuries of an Iconic Book (2016) combined aspects of the history of the book, histories of reading, and the interpretation of Shakespeare on the page to produce a biography of the book. Most recently, This Is Shakespeare (2019) makes a case for Shakespeare’s intrinsic ‘gappiness’, those spaces, ambiguities and unknowns that create opportunities for readers to engage, and demand that we complete the works for ourselves. She is currently working on editions of Nashe’s Summer’s Last Will and Testament and of Twelfth Night, and edits the journal Shakespeare Survey. Her collaborations with Laurie Maguire, including among a number of co-authored pieces a new theory about who wrote All’s Well that Ends Well, and the book Thirty Great Myths About Shakespeare, have developed into a new project about collaboration, historical, creative, and academic. In addition, pedagogy is important to her and she continues to work on readerly editions of early modern texts and on books, articles and lectures which disseminate research to the widest possible audience.
| # | Resource Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 16.To Shakespeare and Beyond: a panel discussion. | Cultural Connections discussion panel Casandra Ash, Peter Kirwan, Jose Perez Diaz and Emma Smith.… | Emma Smith, José Pérez Díez, Peter Kirwan, Cassandra Ash |
| 22 | 16.To Shakespeare and Beyond: a panel discussion. | Cultural Connections discussion panel Casandra Ash, Peter Kirwan, Jose Perez Diaz and Emma Smith.… | Emma Smith, José Pérez Díez, Peter Kirwan, Cassandra Ash |
| 23 | Why should we study Shakespeare? | Dr Emma Smith of Hertford College, Oxford, discusses her current research and proposes why we… | Ilana Lassman, Emma Smith |
| 24 | The Merchant of Venice | This lecture on The Merchant of Venice discusses the ways the play's personal relationships are… | Emma Smith |
| 25 | Taming of the Shrew | Emma Smith uses evidence of early reception and from more recent productions to discuss the… | Emma Smith |
| 26 | A Midsummer Night's Dream | This lecture on A Midsummer Night's Dream uses modern and early modern understandings of dreams to… | Emma Smith |
| 27 | Much Ado About Nothing | Emma Smith asks why the characters are so quick to believe the self-proclaimed villain Don John,… | Emma Smith |
| 28 | Hamlet | The fact that father and son share the same name in Hamlet is used to investigate the play's… | Emma Smith |
| 29 | As You Like It | Asking 'what happens in As You Like It', this lecture considers the play's dramatic structure and… | Emma Smith |
| 30 | Early Modern Drama on the Page and Stage | Many books and university courses, trying to compensate for a history of the neglect or mistrust of… | Emma Smith |