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Genevieve Guenther

Assistant Professor of English

PhD  University of California at Berkeley
Renaissance literature, literary and cultural theory

Research/Writing interests

Genevieve Guenther has research interests in early modern English and in literary and cultural theory. She is particularly interested in studying the historical contexts for what has been retrospectively characterized as aesthetic experience. She is presently completing a book about the relationship between magical practice and what she calls Renaissance instrumental aesthetics in Sidney, Spenser, Marlowe, Jonson, Shakespeare, and Milton. Guenther also has interests in the study of gender and sexuality, and she is currently beginning a project on the early modern English concept of "erotic idolatry."
 
Selected publications

  • "Spenser's Magic, or Instrumental Aesthetics in the 1590 Faerie Queene," in English Literary Renaissance 36.2 (2006), 194-226
  • "Wallace Stevens' Marvellian Intertext: 'The Garden' and 'Description without Place,'" in The Wallace Stevens Journal 31.1 (2007), 14-26
  • "New-Historical Elizabeths," review essay on The Subject of Elizabeth, by Louis Montrose, in Huntington Library Quarterly 70.3 (2007)

Selected talks and papers

  • "Erotic Idolatry in The Winter's Tale," Shakespeare Association of America, San Diego, April 2007
  • Invited Talk, "Writing Poetry, Conjuring Demons," Huntington Library, July 2006
  • "Spenser's Strange Genius: the Mind in the Garden of Adonis and the Bower of Bliss," International Spenser Society Conference, University of Toronto, May 2006
  • "The Permanence of Literary Autonomy and the Ephemera of Disinterest," Modern Language Association, Washington DC, December 2005
  • Invited Paper, "Interest and Instrumentality in Early Modern Literary Aesthetics," (Im)permanence: Cultures in/out of Time, Carnegie Mellon University, October 2005
  • Organizer and Chair, "Renaissance Performativities," Renaissance Society of America, New York, April 2004
  • Invited Paper, "Aesthetics before Kant, or the Interdisciplinarity of Renaissance Criticism," Townsend Center for the Humanities, University of California at Berkeley, April 2003

Teaching

Courses in Renaissance literature, gender studies, literary and cultural theory

Recent undergraduate courses

  • The Renaissance Education of Love (fall 2004)
  • Growing Up in Shakespeare's Plays (fall 2006)
  • Renaissance Magic: Practice and Poetic (spring 2006)
  • Twentieth-Century Literary Theory (fall 2006)
  • Metaphysical Poetry (spring 2006)
  • Genealogies of Tragedy (fall 2007)
Selected fellowships
  • Francis Bacon Foundation, Huntington Library, 2006-07
  • Mabelle McLeod Lewis Memorial Fund, 2003-04
  • Townsend Center for the Humanities, University of California at Berkeley, 2002-03
  • Mellon Foundation, 2000-01

vive@mail.rochester.edu
(585) 275-5050
412 Morey Hall



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