
Dr Chris Salamone
Supernumerary Fellow in English and Tutor for Graduates
Dr Chris Salamone
Dr Chris Salamone
Supernumerary Fellow in English and Tutor for Graduates
Fields of interest include Early Modern English drama, reception history, the supernatural in Early Modern literature, miscellanies and commonplace books, Thomas Nashe, Robert Greene, authorial identity and Early Modern cultural afterlives.
Articles & book chapters
- ‘Nashe’s Ghosts and the Seventeenth Century’, in Kate DeRyker, Andrew Hadfield & Jennifer Richards, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Nashe (Oxford University Press, forthcoming) – submitted.
- ‘Thomas Nashe and His Terrors of the Afterlife’, in Chloe Preedy & Rachel Willie, eds., Thomas Nashe and Literary Performance (Manchester University Press, 2024), 107-126
- ‘“I Am Not Here”: Staging the (Un)Dead and the Thresholds of Theatrical Performance’, in Ann C. Hall & Alan Nadel, eds., Dramatic Apparitions and Theatrical Ghosts: The Staging of Illusion across Time and Cultures (London: Methuen Drama; Bloomsbury, 2023), 69-92.
- ‘’Las sir! I’m no Ghost’: the misprision of spectral presence in Caroline drama’, Arrêt sur scène / Scene Focus, 11 | 2022: URL: http://journals.openedition.org/asf/2733 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/asf.2733
- ‘The Fragments, Scraps, the Bits and Greasy Relics: Shakespeare and the Eighteenth-Century Poetic Miscellany’, in Abigail Williams & Jennifer Batt, eds., Poetry and Popularity in Eighteenth-Century Poetic Miscellanies: New Findings form the Digital Miscellanies Index (Special Edition, Eighteenth-Century Life, 41:1 January 2017), 7-31