Emma Smith

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
41 Antony and Cleopatra What kind of tragedy is this play, with its two central figures rather than a singular hero? The… Emma Smith
42 Richard II Lecture eight in the Approaching Shakespeare series asks the question that structures Richard II:… Emma Smith
43 Twelfth Night The seventh Approaching Shakespeare lecture takes a minor character in Twelfth Night - Antonio -… Emma Smith
44 Titus Andronicus Focusing in detail on one particular scene, and on critical responses to it, this sixth Approaching… Emma Smith
45 The Winter's Tale How we can make sense of a play that veers from tragedy to comedy and stretches credulity in its… Emma Smith
46 Macbeth In this fourth Approaching Shakespeare lecture the question is one of agency: who or what makes… Emma Smith
47 Measure for Measure The third Approaching Shakespeare lecture, on Measure for Measure, focuses on the vexed question of… Emma Smith
48 Henry V The second lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series looks at King Henry V, and asks whether… Emma Smith
49 The Bodleian Shakespeare: A treasure lost... and regained From the 2010 Alumni Weekend. Emma Smith reveals how Oxford University mobilised Alumni support to… Emma Smith
50 Othello Othello - First in Emma Smith's Approaching Shakespeare lecture series; looking at the central… Emma Smith