Julie Sanders

Julie Sanders is Professor of English Literature and Drama at Newcastle University, specialising in early modern literature and adaptation studies[1]. She is the university's Deputy Vice-Chancellor[2].

Sanders gained her doctorate at the University of Warwick, and studied at Ca' Foscari University of Venice and at University of California, Berkeley. In 1995 she took a lectureship at Keele University and in 2004 joined the University of Nottingham as Chair of English Literature and Drama. She was Head of the School of English from 2010-13 and subsequently seconded for two years to the Ningbo China joint venture campus as Vice Provost, launching the Arts and Humanities Research Council's first centre in China for Digital Copyright and IT research. Saunders was awarded the Rose Mary Crawshay Prize by the British Academy for international women’s scholarship.[1][3]

Sanders has been a member of the expert panel on BBC Radio 4's In Our Time for "The Anatomy of Melancholy", "The History of Metaphor", "Elizabethan Revenge Tragedy – theatre of blood", "The Metaphysical Poets – sex and death in the 17th century" and "Pastoral Literature – the romantic idealisation of the countryside".[4][5][6][7][8]

Selected publications

  • Sanders, Julie (2016), Adaptation and appropriation, The new critical idom, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, ISBN 1315737949
  • Sanders, Julie (2014), The cultural geography of early modern drama, 1620-1650, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 1107463343
  • Sanders, Julie (2014), Ben Jonson in context, Literature in context, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 1107637090
  • Sanders, Julie (2014), The Cambridge introduction to early modern drama, 1576-1642, Cambridge introductions to literature., Cambridge, England, ISBN 113900493X
  • Sanders, Julie (2002), Novel Shakespeares : twentieth-century women novelists and appropriation, New York, ISBN 9780719058158
  • Sanders, Julie (1999), Caroline drama : the plays of Massinger, Ford, Shirley, and Brome, Writers and their work., Northcote House, in association with the British Council, ISBN 9780746308776
gollark: If you go too far up you MAY crack the crystal sphere surrounding the world.
gollark: You still believe in the moon?
gollark: The margins of error aren't THAT narrow or the Earth would have burned up by now.
gollark: That would imply that you'd burn horribly if you jumped or went up mountains or something.
gollark: What?

References

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