History
Recent Submissions
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“The Case of Catherine Dammartin: Friends, Fellows, and the Survival of Celibacy in England’s Protestant Universities"
(University of Toronto Press, 2021) -
“License to Kill: Assassination and the Politics of Murder in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England."
(University of Toronto Press, 2013) -
“Bodies of Evidence: Sex and Murder (or Gender and Homicide) in Early Modern England."
(Wiley Blackwell, 2015) -
“Crime, Punishment, and Violence in The Tudors"
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) -
“Coverture and Criminal Forfeiture in English Law."
(Ashgate, 2014) -
“’Murder’s Crimson Badge’: Homicide in the Age of Shakespeare."
(Oxford University Press, 2016) -
“Consent and Coercion, Force and Fraud: Marriages in Star Chamber."
(University of London Press, 2021) -
“Queen Elizabeth I and Her Swedish Gossips: Godparenting, Friendship, and Family in Early Modern England."
(Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 2022) -
“No Greater Provocation? Adultery and the Mitigation of Murder in English Law"
(Cambridge University Press, 2016) -
“Law, Status, and the Lash: Judicial Whipping in Early Modern England"
(Cambridge University Press, 2021) -
"Introduction: Star Chamber Matters"
(University of London Press, 2021)The full volume is available Open Access at the publisher's site: https://humanities-digital-library.org/index.php/hdl/catalog/book/star-chamber-matters/ -
Star Chamber Reports: Harley MS 2143
(2018)Only the introduction is available here, given copyright restrictions. -
Deconstructing a 'National Composer': Chopin and Polish Exiles in Paris, 1831-49
(2000-Fall2)Considering the notion of Frédéric Chopin as a "national" composer in the Romantic sense, and his relationships with Parisian salons and the Polish émigré community in Paris, demonstrates the limited validity of making ...