Publications & Presentations

Fleck, Andrew J

Publications & Presentations

  • Articles and Book Chapters
  • “‘None Ends Where He Begun’: Astronomical and Polemic Revolutions in John Donne,” The Book of Nature and Humanity in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, ed. David Hawkes and Richard G. Newhauser. Turnhout: Brepols, 2013. 265-85.
  • “‘A Barren Sceptre’ (3.1.63): Generation, Generations, and Destiny in Maqbool and Global Adaptations of Macbeth,” Shakespeare on Screen: Macbeth, ed. Sarah Hatchuel, Nathalie Vienne-Guerrin, Victoria Bladen. Rouen: Publications des Universités de Rouen et du Havre, 2013. 279-98.
  • “The Father’s Living Monument: Textual Progeny and the Birth of the Author in Sidney’s Arcadias,” Studies in Philology 107.4 (2010): 520-47.
  • “‘Conveyance of History’: Narrative, Chronicle, History and the Memory of the Henrician Golden Age in Late Elizabethan Fiction.” in Henry VIII and His Afterlife: Literature, Politics, and Art, ed. Christopher Highley, John King, and Mark Rankin. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2009. 225-45.
  • “‘At the time of his death’: Manuscript Instability and Walter Ralegh’s Performance on the Scaffold.” Journal of British Studies 48.1 (2009): 4-28. Reprinted in Heads Will Roll: Decapitation in the Medieval and Early Modern Imagination. ed. Larissa Tracy and Jeff Massey. Leiden: Brill, 2012. 235-59.
  • “’Ick verstaw you niet’: Performing Foreign Tongues on the Early Modern English Stage.” Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England 20 (2007): 204-221.
  • “Anatomizing the Body Politic: The Nation and the Renaissance Body in Thomas Nashe’s The Unfortunate Traveler.” Modern Philology 104.3 (2007): 295-328.
  • “Marking Difference and National Identity in Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday.” SEL 46.2 (2006): 349-70.
  • “Dutch Ants and Dutch Uncles: Sorting Out Englishness Among the Exile Community in the Low Countries.” Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History 28 (2006): 215-43.
  • “Vulgar Fingers of the Multitude: Shakespeare, Jonson, and the Transformation of News from the Low Countries.” Shakespeare Yearbook 15 (2005): 89-112.
  • “Here, There, and In Between: Representing Difference in the Travels of Sir John Mandeville.” Studies in Philology 97.4 (2000): 379-400.
  • “Crusoe’s Shadow: Christianity, Colonization, and the Other.” Historicizing Christian Encounters with the Other. ed. John Hawley. New York: NYU and Macmillan Presses, 1998. 74-89.
  • Shorter Essays and Notes
  • Entries in Yale Milton Encyclopedia, ed. Thomas Corns. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2012. Fourteen entries on Milton’s Dutch connections, including substantial entries on “United Provinces,” “Sonnet 17 (To Sir Henry Vane, the Younger),” “Dutch (language),” “Daniel Heinsius,” “Nicolaas Heinsius,” et al.
  • Entries in Blackwell Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature. ed. Garrett A. Sullivan and Alan Stewart. Oxford: Blackwell, 2012: “George Chapman,” “Edward, Lord Herbert of Cherbury,” “Thomas May,” “Francis Quarles,” and “Sir Henry Wotton.”
  • “The Origins of Englishmen for My Money’s ‘Lover in the Basket’ Episode in Doesborch’s Lyfe of Virgilius,” Notes and Queries 57.3 (2010): 357-359.
  • “The Custom of Courtesans in Marston’s The Dutch Courtesan.” ANQ 21.3 (2008): 11-19.
  • “Early Modern Marginalia in Spenser’s Faerie Queene at the Folger.” Notes and Queries 55.2 (2008): 165-70.
  • “The Shepherd Proteus in Dryden’s Annus Mirabilis.” Notes and Queries 54.4 (2007): 429-31.
  • “Marvell’s Use of Nedham’s Selden.” Notes and Queries 54.4 (2007): 422-25.
  • “The Ambivalent Blush: Figural and Structural Metonymy, Modesty, and Much Ado About Nothing.” ANQ 19.1 (2006): 16-23.
  • “Imprisoned in the Flesh: The Return of Petrarch in Nashe’s The Unfortunate Traveler.” English Language Notes 43.2 (2005): 22-29.
  • “The Limitations of Narrative: Nashe’s Appropriation of Ovidian Decorum in The Unfortunate Traveler.” Notes and Queries 52.2 (2005): 182-5.
  • “The Ring and the World: Donne’s Appropriation of Petrarch’s ‘Sonnet 38’ in The First Anniversary.” Notes and Queries 49.3 (2002): 327-9.
  • “Guyomar and Guyon: Dryden’s Debt to Spenser in The Indian Emperour.” Notes and Queries 48.1 (2001): 26-28.
  • “‘We think he means...’: Creating Working Definitions through Small Group Discussion.” Teaching English in the Two-Year College 27.2 (1999): 228-31. Reprinted in Teaching Developmental Writing: Background Readings, ed. Susan Naomi Bernstein (Boston: Bedford, 2001): 220-225.