
Featuring Professors Jonathan Buehl and Sarah Neville
Supported by Global Arts + Humanities Discovery Theme

Jonathan Buehl is an associate professor in the Department of English, where he teaches courses on rhetoric, research methods, and technical and professional communication. He is the author of Assembling Arguments: Multimodal Rhetoric and Scientific Discourse and the co-editor of Science and the Internet: Communicating Knowledge in a Digital Age. His essays have appeared in such venues as College Composition and Communication, Technical Communication Quarterly, The Routledge Handbook of Scientific Communication, and Landmark Essays on Archival Research.
Sarah Neville, "The textual imagination in The Second Part of King Henry the Sixth"
Critical editing relies on the imagined historical relations between imagined material forms, and the role of the editor is to bring these carefully articulated and materially demonstrable imaginings into being in the construction of the new, information-rich scholarly artifact known as a critical edition. As a textual theorist, scholarly editor and theatre artist, Sarah Neville's work investigates how modern conceptions of authority manifest in the printed artifacts of the past. Her talk will discuss her current editorial project on the first history play Shakespeare had a hand in writing
Lunch Provided.