David Brewer: “The Ancien Regime of Authorial Names”

December 13, 2012

Thursday, December 13 at 5:00, Beinecke Room 38. The 18th-19th-Century Colloquium and Yale Program in the History of the Book present: David Brewer, Associate Professor of English, Ohio State. His work focuses on eighteenth and early nineteenth-century literary, theatrical, and visual culture, plus the history of authorship and reading more generally. He is also fascinated by the methodological challenges of writing literary history. He is the author of The Afterlife of Character, 1726-1825 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005, as part of their Material Texts series), and the recipient of a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. His current book project, The Inhumanity of Authors (and why it’s a good thing), investigates the uses to which authorial names were put in the eighteenth-century Anglophone world. His edition of Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The Rivals and George Colman the Elder’s Polly Honeycombe is just out from Broadview Press

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