ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies)

ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies)

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ACMRS is the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. A research center representing Arizona's three public universities: ASU, UA, and NAU.

ACMRS was established in 1981 by the Arizona Board of Regents as a state-wide research unit.

06/23/2026

Join the RaceB4Race Mentorship Network to develop your research and academic career alongside a leading scholar in premodern critical race studies. Mentees are matched with a mentor for quarterly virtual meetings over two semesters to discuss career development, work-life balance, writing, publishing, and cutting-edge research happening within the field of premodern critical race studies. Applications due June 26! Apply now: https://acmrs.asu.edu/RaceB4Race/mentorship-network

06/22/2026

He Words Me: Men Writing as Women in Early Modern England, edited by Catherine Loomis, collects approximately 300 poems and short prose works from early modern England in which male authors adopt the voice of a female narrator. Most of the texts in this collection have never been previously collected and are difficult to access even for scholars with institutional archive subscriptions. Read online for free now: https://asu.pressbooks.pub/he-words-me/

Black protest tradition in early African American literature 04/22/2026

Seven new resources from Cassander L. Smith on race, protest, and respectability politics in early American and early African American literature.

You'll want to check out this annotated syllabus on the Black protest tradition that opens with a question most students think they can answer but can’t: is there really a right way to protest? Smith traces the answer from Kendrick Lamar back to Olaudah Equiano, through Frederick Douglass, Harriet Jacobs, and Toni Morrison.

Also included: two graduate syllabi on race in early America and premodern critical race studies, a classroom activity where students remix Phillis Wheatley’s poetry to address current events, and video lectures that use black-ish as an entry point to 18th-century literature.

All free. As always.

Black protest tradition in early African American literature Smith, Cassander L. "Black protest tradition in early African American literature." Throughlines. www.throughlines.org/suite-content/black-protest-tradition-in-early-african-american-literature. [Date accessed].

‘What Country, Friends, Is This?’: Shakespeare and the Staging of Exile 04/17/2026

New and FREE to read online—'What Country Friends, Is This?' Shakespeare and the Staging of Exile. In their intro, editors Stephanie E. Chamberlain, Vanessa I. Corredera, and James M. Sutton address our contemporary age of exile and what Shakespeare has to do with it.

‘What Country, Friends, Is This?’: Shakespeare and the Staging of Exile An exploration of displacement and exile in Shakespeare’s plays and our world today.

Photos from ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies)'s post 04/02/2026

Spanish imperialism, Turk plays, and New World encounters—developing racial constructs on the early modern stage. Check out part 3 of Noémie Ndiaye's Race in Early Modern Drama syllabus. More to come in the next few days, but you can check out the whole syllabus for free right now at throughlines.org.

04/01/2026

Shakespeare and the Senses by Holly Dugan is also out this week! This book offers a fascinating new way to think about Shakespeare—not just as literature, but as a lived, sensory experience. What did early audiences hear, smell, and feel in the theatre? How did those sensations shape meaning?

Written to be accessible and engaging, it’s ideal for students, teachers, and anyone curious about how the past was experienced through the senses.

Available to read online for free or you can grab your own print copy: https://asu.pressbooks.pub/shakespeare-and-the-senses/

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