Alice Leonard FRHistS is an expert on early modern history and literature, specifically error, book history, and science. She is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Arts, Memory, and Communities at Coventry University. She was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in September 2022. [1]
Leonard received her PhD from the University of Warwick and the Université de Neuchâtel in 2015. [2] Her doctoral thesis was entitled Error in Shakespeare, Shakespeare in Error. [3]
Leonard published her monograph, Shakespeare in Error: Error in Shakespeare, in 2020 with Palgrave-Macmillan. [4] [5] [6] Before her appointment at Coventry University, she was a Marie Curie Cofund Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick. [7] [8] Leonard has published on Shakespeare's Hamlet, Thomas Browne’s Pseudodoxia Epidemica (1646), the female gaze, and representations of foreignness on the early modern stage. Her work has been described as 'provocative, liberating, and even radical'. [9] Leonard is a co-editor on the Notebooks volume of The Complete Works of Thomas Browne, forthcoming with OUP. She was the Byrne-Bussey Marconi Fellow at the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, in 2022. [10]
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Alice Leonard FRHistS is an expert on early modern history and literature, specifically error, book history, and science. She is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Arts, Memory, and Communities at Coventry University. She was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in September 2022. [1]
Leonard received her PhD from the University of Warwick and the Université de Neuchâtel in 2015. [2] Her doctoral thesis was entitled Error in Shakespeare, Shakespeare in Error. [3]
Leonard published her monograph, Shakespeare in Error: Error in Shakespeare, in 2020 with Palgrave-Macmillan. [4] [5] [6] Before her appointment at Coventry University, she was a Marie Curie Cofund Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick. [7] [8] Leonard has published on Shakespeare's Hamlet, Thomas Browne’s Pseudodoxia Epidemica (1646), the female gaze, and representations of foreignness on the early modern stage. Her work has been described as 'provocative, liberating, and even radical'. [9] Leonard is a co-editor on the Notebooks volume of The Complete Works of Thomas Browne, forthcoming with OUP. She was the Byrne-Bussey Marconi Fellow at the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, in 2022. [10]
{{
cite web}}
: Missing or empty |title=
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help)