All Stories

  1. The 1553 succession crisis reconsidered
  2. “Plesures in lernyng” and the Politics of Counsel in Early Elizabethan England: Royal Visits to Cambridge and Oxford
  3. ‘A mere historian’: Patrick Collinson and the Study of Literature
  4. Doubtful and dangerous
  5. Introduction: a historiographical perspective
  6. The earlier Elizabethan succession question revisited
  7. The Puritan, the Jesuit and the Jacobean succession
  8. The Oxford Handbook of Holinshed’s “Chronicles” ed. by Paulina Kewes, Ian W. Archer, and Felicity Heal
  9. The Oxford Handbook of Holinshed's Chronicles
  10. History Plays and the Royal Succession
  11. Two Queens, One Inventory
  12. Henry Savile's Tacitus and the Politics of Roman History in Late Elizabethan England
  13. David Armitage , Conal Condren , and Andrew Fitzmaurice , eds. Shakespeare and Early Modern Political Thought . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. xii + 289 pp. index. bibl. $95. ISBN: 978–0–521–76808–5.
  14. The Elizabethan History Play: A True Genre?
  15. History and Its Uses: Introduction
  16. Roman History and Early Stuart Drama: Thomas Heywood's The Rape of Lucrece
  17. "The State Is out of Tune": Nicholas Rowe's "Jane Shore" and the Succession Crisis of 1713-14
  18. Professional Imaginative Writing in England, 1670-1740: "Hackney for Bread" Brean S. Hammond
  19. Reviews
  20. Authorship and Appropriation
  21. Prologue
  22. Collaboration
  23. The Canon
  24. Epilogue
  25. The Playwright and the Marketplace
  26. The Proprieties of Appropriation
  27. Plagiarism and Property
  28. Marlowe, history, and politics
  29. Dryden’s theatre and the passions of politics