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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 31 | Shakespeare's Contemporary dramatists | The Elizabethan and Jacobean theatres specialized in new plays which had relatively few… | Emma Smith |
| 32 | Renaissance Theatre | When John Brayne built the Red Lion Theatre in London’s Whitechapel in 1569, he could hardly have… | Emma Smith |
| 33 | William Shakespeare | How William Shakespeare (1564-… | Emma Smith |
| 34 | King Lear | Showing how generations of critics - and Shakespeare himself - have rewritten the ending of King… | Emma Smith |
| 35 | King John | At the heart of King John is the death of his rival Arthur: this fifteenth lecture in the… | Emma Smith |
| 36 | Pericles, Prince of Tyre | Pericles has been on the margins of the Shakespearean canon: this fourteenth lecture in the… | Emma Smith |
| 37 | Richard III | In this thirteenth lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series the focus is on the inevitability… | Emma Smith |
| 38 | The Comedy of Errors | Lecture 12 in the Approaching Shakespeare series asks how seriously we can take the farcical… | Emma Smith |
| 39 | Henry IV part 1 | Like generations of theatre-goers, this lecture concentrates on the (large) figure of Sir John… | Emma Smith |
| 40 | The Tempest | That the character of Prospero is a Shakespearean self-portrait is a common reading of The Tempest… | Emma Smith |