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Folger Fellows

Blog posts written by or about Folger fellows
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Shakespeare’s Asia: Ships, spices, and porcelain
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare’s Asia: Ships, spices, and porcelain

Posted
Author
Su Fang Ng

Folger Fellow Su Fang Ng examines several Shakespeare allusions to Asia that reinforce associations with spices, trade, and voyages.

Recipes to remember: Coriander, gallyngale, and the legacies of the lost
a handwritten book of recipes
Shakespeare and Beyond

Recipes to remember: Coriander, gallyngale, and the legacies of the lost

Posted
Author
Lucy Mookerjee

The Receipt Book of Margaret Baker, compiled in 1675, contains a recipe for a memory-potion called “Confect of Coriander Seed.”

Shakespeare and the language of slavery
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare and the language of slavery

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Author
Dr. Judith Spicksley

A Folger fellow shares her research into the language of slavery in early modern England, and more specifically, the use of that language in the works of William Shakespeare.

Excerpt: 'Index, A History of the' by Dennis Duncan
incomplete handwritten index
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt: 'Index, A History of the' by Dennis Duncan

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

While doing research in the Folger collection, Dennis Duncan encountered hundreds of indexes created by early modern readers. In this excerpt from his newly published book, “Index, A History of the,” Duncan describes the fascinating variety of reader indexes he…

Recipes for dealing with the plague in Shakespeare’s England
Burges's water for the plague
Shakespeare and Beyond

Recipes for dealing with the plague in Shakespeare’s England

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Author
Yann Ryan

Recipes for plague-curing potions like “Doctor Burges’s remedy” are often found in household recipe books of Shakespeare’s time. Folger fellow Yann Ryan writes about the circulation of information and misinformation through these recipes.

Picturing early modern women athletes
Women racing gondolas
Shakespeare and Beyond

Picturing early modern women athletes

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Author
Peter Radford

Folger fellow Peter Radford explores the history of picturing women athletes from ancient Greece to early modern Europe, how these images can be hard to find and interpret, but also why they’re so valuable and compelling.

Glimpses of women athletes in 18th-century England
Shakespeare and Beyond

Glimpses of women athletes in 18th-century England

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Author
Peter Radford

A Folger fellow and former Olympian shares images and stories of 18th-century women athletes in England who competed in races, fights, cricket matches, and more.

Early modern sleep care: Recipes for restful sleep
Shakespeare and Beyond

Early modern sleep care: Recipes for restful sleep

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Author
Sasha Handley

Thomas Sheppey devoted several densely written pages of his 17th-century manuscript to the topic of sleep — how to trigger it, how to interrupt it, how to influence its depth and length, and even how to stop people talking in…

BECOMING OTHELLO! A gender-flipped journey onstage and in the archive
Shakespeare and Beyond

BECOMING OTHELLO! A gender-flipped journey onstage and in the archive

Posted
Author
Debra Ann Byrd

Debra Ann Byrd writes about encountering an early female Othello in the Folger collection and developing her memoir and solo show, Becoming Othello.

Translating the Chinese classic 'The Peony Pavilion' with a 'Shakespearean flavor'
The Peony Pavilion
Shakespeare and Beyond

Translating the Chinese classic 'The Peony Pavilion' with a 'Shakespearean flavor'

Posted
Author
Esther French

The Peony Pavilion. “Kunqu performance at Peking University.” Wikimedia Commons / Antonis SHEN / CC BY-SA 2.0 Could Chinese literature be more popular with English-speaking audiences if translators favored words, phrases and poetic forms that spark associations with Shakespeare? This…