Dr Tom Rutter
School of English
Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare and Renaissance Drama
+44 114 222 8473
Full contact details
School of English
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
91探花
S3 7RA
- Profile
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I arrived at the University of 91探花 in 2012 after six years at 91探花 Hallam University, before which I taught at University College London (where I took my PhD) and then at London South Bank University. Before that, I studied for my BA at St John鈥檚 College, Oxford.
My main area of expertise is Renaissance literature, especially drama. My PhD explored the representation of work on the early modern stage; when rewriting my thesis as a book I became increasingly interested in playing companies and how they bring together the activities of disparate groups such as dramatists, actors, audiences, patrons, theatre owners and booksellers, offering a way of linking dramatic production to wider forces in society. This 'repertory approach' informed my second monograph, which focused on a single company, the Admiral鈥檚 Men. My main current project is on early modern drama and science.
I am co-director of the .
- Research interests
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In 2017 I published a book about the Admiral鈥檚 Men, having produced several essays and articles about plays in their repertory. I also have a particular interest in the plays of Shakespeare (who didn鈥檛 write for the Admiral鈥檚 Men) and Marlowe, as well as in the institutional contexts of the early modern theatre. I recently co-edited (with Lisa Hopkins of 91探花 Hallam University) a collection of essays on the Cavendish family, and I am currently writing a book on Shakespeare and science.
I am an editor of the journal Shakespeare:
- Publications
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Books
- Shakespeare and the Admiral's Men: Reading across Repertories on the London Stage, 1594鈥1600. Cambridge University Press.
- The Cambridge Introduction to Christopher Marlowe.
- Work and Play on the Shakespearean Stage. Cambridge University Press.
Edited books
- The Arden Handbook of Shakespeare and Early Modern Drama: Perspectives on Culture, Performance and Identity. London: Arden Shakespeare.
- A Companion to the Cavendishes. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press.
Journal articles
- . Comparative Drama, 55(2-3), 404-413.
- . English Literary Renaissance, 49(2), 248-272.
- Hamlet, pirates, and purgatory. Renaissance and Reformation, 38(1), 117-139.
- Marlowe, _Hoffman_, and the Admiral鈥檚 Men. Marlowe Studies: An Annual, 3, 49-62.
- Introduction: The Repertory-Based Approach. Early Theatre: a journal associated with the Records of Early English Drama, 13(3), 121-132.
- Marlowe, the 鈥淢ad Priest of the Sun鈥, and Heliogabalus. Early Theatre: a journal associated with the Records of Early English Drama, 13(2), 109-120.
- Marlovian Echoes in the Admiral's Men Repertory: _Alcazar_, _Stukeley_, _Patient Grissil_. Shakespeare Bulletin: a journal of performance, criticism, and scholarship, 27(1), 27-38.
- . SEL - Studies in English Literature, 48(2), 283-303.
- . Shakespeare, 4(3), 336-350.
- The Actors in _Sir Thomas More_. Shakespeare Yearbook, 16, 223-240.
- Merchants of Venice in _A Knack to Know an Honest Man_. Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England: an annual gathering of research, criticism, and reviews, 19, 194-209.
- Fit Hamlet, Fat Hamlet, and the Problems of Aristocratic Labour. Cahiers Elisabethains: late medieval and renaissance English studies, 68, 27-32.
- Rewriting Idolatry: Doctor Faustus and Romeo and Juliet. Comparative Drama, 58(3), 63-88.
- . Early Theatre, 13(2).
- . Early Theatre, 13(1).
Chapters
- Introduction In Dowd MM & Rutter T (Ed.), The Arden Handbook of Shakespeare and Early Modern Drama (pp. 1-17).
- The Cavendishes and Ben Jonson In Hopkins L & Rutter T (Ed.), A Companion to the Cavendishes (pp. 107-125). Leeds: Arc Humanities Press.
- Tamburlaine the Weather Man In McInnis D (Ed.), Tamburlaine: A Critical Reader (pp. 107-128). London: Arden Shakespeare.
- The Spanish Tragedy and Virgil In Rist T (Ed.), The Spanish Tragedy: A Critical Reader (pp. 153-174). London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
- In Johnson A, Sell R & Wilcox A (Ed.), Community-Making in Early Stuart Theatres: Stage and Audience (pp. 218-238). Abingdon: Routledge.
- Tamburlaine: Parts One and Two In Deats SM (Ed.), Christopher Marlowe at 450 (pp. 51-70). Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd..
- The Professional Theatre and Marlowe In Smith E & Bartels E (Ed.), Marlowe in Context (pp. 262-272). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- _Englishmen for My Money_: Work and Social Conflict? In Dowd MM & Korda N (Ed.), Working Subjects in Early Modern English Drama (pp. 87-99). Farnham, Surrey and Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate.
- Adult Playing Companies 1603 to 1613, The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern Theatre (pp. 72-87). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- , A Companion to British Literature (pp. 181-196). John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Book reviews
- Bradley J. Irish, Shakespeare and Disgust: The History and Science of Early Modern Revulsion (London: Arden Shakespeare, 2023). Debapriya Sarkar, Possible Knowledge: The Literary Forms of Early Modern Science (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023). Early Modern Literary Studies, 23(2).
- . The Review of English Studies, 74(314), 357-359.
- Shakespeare's Englishes: Against Englishness.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 117, 112-113.
- 'A Brief Discourse of Rebellion and Rebels' by George North: A Newly Uncovered Manuscript Source for Shakespeare's Plays. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 115, 152-153.
- Shakespeare's Two Playhouses: Repertory and Theatre Space at the Globe and the Blackfriars, 1599-1613. COMPARATIVE DRAMA, 54(1-2), 123-126.
- . Renaissance Studies, 34(3), 490-492.
- . Shakespeare, 15(4), 453-454.
- . Comparative Drama, 50(1), 123-125.
- . The Modern Language Review, 110(3), 823-823.
- . The Modern Language Review, 107(2), 610-610.
- Shakespeare, the Queen's Men, and the Elizabethan Performance of History. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 106, 227-228.
- Political Economy and the States of Literature in Early Modern England. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 106, 226-227.
- Review of Robert A. Logan, Shakespeare鈥檚 Marlowe: The Influence of Christopher Marlowe on Shakespeare鈥檚 Artistry (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007). Early Modern Literary Studies, 15(2).
- . Notes and Queries, 57(2), 259-260.
- Shakespeare's Companies: William Shakespeare's Early Career and the Acting Companies, 1577-1594. NOTES AND QUERIES, 57(1), 129-131.
- Shakespeare's Opposites: The Admiral's Company 1594-1625. NOTES AND QUERIES, 57(1), 129-131.
- Three Renaissance Usury Plays: 'The Three Ladies of London' by Robert Wilson, 'Englishmen for my Money' by William Haughton and 'The Hog Hath Lost his Pearl' by Robert Tailor. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 105, 218-219.
- The Cartographic Imagination in Early Modern England: Re-writing the World in Marlowe, Spenser, Raleigh and Marvell. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 104, 1109-1110.
- Shakespeare's Ideas: More Things in Heaven and Earth. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 104, 1110-1111.
- Review of Labor and Writing in Early Modern England, 1567-1667. By LAURIE ELLINGHAUSEN.. Modern Language Review, 1(104).
- . Notes and Queries, 55(4), 528-530.
- . The Modern Language Review, 103(2), 508-508.
- . NOTES AND QUERIES, 55(1), 92-94.
- . Notes and Queries, 55(1), 92-94.
- Review of Fiona McNeill, Poor Women in Shakespeare (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2007). Early Modern Literary Studies, 13(3).
- . Modern Language Review, 102(1), 206-207.
- Reading, society and politics in early modern England.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 101, 221-222.
- Threshold poetics: Milton and intersubjectivity.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 100, 774-777.
- Imagining death in Spenser and Milton.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 100, 774-777.
- The baroque in English neoclassical literature.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 100, 774-777.
- Better a shrew than a sheep: Women, drama, and the culture of jest in early modern England.. MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW, 100, 778-779.
- . The Modern Language Review, 99(2), 461-461.
- . The Modern Language Review, 99(1), 155-155.
- . The Yearbook of English Studies, 32, 286-286.
- . Early Theatre, 18(1).
- . Early Theatre, 17(1).
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Other
- Research group
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I am currently supervising PhDs on Renaissance literature and the Gothic, and on Shakespeare and the elements. Recent PhDs include dissertations on cloth in the plays of Thomas Middleton and an edition of Samuel Daniel鈥檚 Cleopatra.
I would welcome applications to do postgraduate work on Renaissance drama, particularly in the areas of Shakespeare, Marlowe, repertory studies, and early modern science.
- Teaching activities
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I teach on the following modules:
- LIT113: Foundations in Literary Study
- LIT114: Shakespeare
- LIT120: Renaissance to Revolution
- LIT254: Christopher Marlowe
- LIT6047: Early Modern Books
- LIT646: Renaissance Transformations
- EGH601: Shakespeare and Early Women Dramatists
- EGH602 Research Methods In English Studies
- EGH629: Pastoral Literature
I am also programme director for the MA English Literature programme.