
November 9, 2022
4:00 pm
-
5:30 pm
207 Denney Hall
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2022-11-09 17:00:00
2022-11-09 18:30:00
Zachary Hines, "The Best Book of Romance: The Gawain Manuscript and Codicological Miscellaneity"
Please join us for a presentation by Zachary Hines on his current research. Zach is a visiting assistant professor of English at The Ohio State University at Lima, where he specializes in medieval literature and book history. Zach’s archival scholarship explores relationships between premodern literary works and the material forms in which they survive – in particular, how individual collectors and institutional libraries during the English Renaissance sought to amplify the "medieval" qualities of handwritten books from the Middle Ages.
This event will also be broadcast live as a Zoom webinar. Please email Ryan Friedman (.193) for the link.
207 Denney Hall
OSU ASC Drupal 8
ascwebservices@osu.edu
America/New_York
public
Date Range
2022-11-09 16:00:00
2022-11-09 17:30:00
Zachary Hines, "The Best Book of Romance: The Gawain Manuscript and Codicological Miscellaneity"
Please join us for a presentation by Zachary Hines on his current research. Zach is a visiting assistant professor of English at The Ohio State University at Lima, where he specializes in medieval literature and book history. Zach’s archival scholarship explores relationships between premodern literary works and the material forms in which they survive – in particular, how individual collectors and institutional libraries during the English Renaissance sought to amplify the "medieval" qualities of handwritten books from the Middle Ages.
This event will also be broadcast live as a Zoom webinar. Please email Ryan Friedman (.193) for the link.
207 Denney Hall
America/New_York
public
Please join us for a presentation by Zachary Hines on his current research. Zach is a visiting assistant professor of English at The Ohio State University at Lima, where he specializes in medieval literature and book history. Zach’s archival scholarship explores relationships between premodern literary works and the material forms in which they survive – in particular, how individual collectors and institutional libraries during the English Renaissance sought to amplify the "medieval" qualities of handwritten books from the Middle Ages.
This event will also be broadcast live as a Zoom webinar. Please email Ryan Friedman (.193) for the link.