Death and disappearance: 鈥渉aving fun鈥 in early鈥搈odern Scotland.
In the Chair:
Professor Greg Walker Masson Professor of English Literature鈥 University of Edinburgh.
Monday 24 May 2010
18:00聽鈥 19:00
A project to locate all original evidence of play鈥 ceremony and secular music in Scotland before 1645 has proved to be a lot more than the fun implicit in the subject matter. Early鈥搈odern Scotland has left us little in the way of literary drama鈥 but its varied records constitute an immensely rich source for exploring issues of theatricality and spectatorship in public life. To illustrate this鈥 the lecture analyses some events from late sixteenth鈥 and early seventeenth鈥揷entury Scotland which contemporaries considered striking enough to be recorded for posterity.
John McGavin is a Professor of Medieval Literature and Culture, in English within the School of Humanities, and his research interests include the areas of late medieval English literature, and medieval and early-modern English and Scottish Drama, with particular interest in the interpretation of primary records of drama, theatricality and play. Professor McGavin was awarded the 2009 Frank Watson Book Prize in Scottish History for his 2007 publication: Theatricality and Narrative in Medieval and Early-Modern Scotland.
Each of this year’s Inaugural Lectures in the School of Humanities will have an end of lecture collection for a good cause. For this lecture, the School wishes to support the ‘James Shears and Alan Bannon Memorial Fund’, the fund set up to support the families of the Firefighters who recently lost their lives in Southampton.
More information
Venue
Building 65,
Lecture Theatre A
School of Humanities,
Avenue Campus, Southampton,
SO17 1BF
Click here for directions
Refreshments
Tea and Coffee will be served at 17:30 in the North corridor.
A wine reception will be held following the lecture
If you would like to attend or have any further queries please contact Mrs Tina Clarke:
Phone: 02380 598768
Email: tec@soton.ac.uk