|

Insight to a Shakespeare Tragedy with Dr. Kent Lehnhof. Watch Now!
|
Kent Lehnhof - Associate Professor Department of English - Chapman University 2004 - present
Wilkinson Hall, 211 (714) 628-2746 lehnhof@chapman.edu B.A. (with honors), Brigham Young University Ph.D., Duke Unviersity
Kent Lehnhof earned a B.A. in English from Brigham Young University and a Ph.D. in British Literature from Duke University. He has been teaching at Chapman since 2004, specializing in the literature and culture of the early modern period, with a particular emphasis on the Renaissance stage and questions of gender. His essays on Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton have appeared in journals such as English Literary Renaissance, ELH, SEL, Milton Quarterly, Milton Studies, as well as several edited collections. He is currently working on a series of articles examining the intersection of antifeminism and antitheatricalism in early modern England.
In 2008, Dr. Lehnhof was awarded the Wang-Fradkin Professorship for Scholarly Excellence, the highest honor Chapman can confer on a member of the faculty.
Click here for Dr. Lehnhof's CV
Recent Publications
"Acting Virtuous: Chastity, Theatricality, and The Tragedie of Mariam," in Performing Pedagogy: Gender and Instruction in Early Modern England, ed. Kathryn M. Moncrief and Kathryn R. McPherson (Ashgate, 2010), forthcoming.
"Performing Masculinity in Paradise Lost," Milton Studies 50, ed. Albert C. Labriola (U of Pittsburgh P, 2009), 64-77.
"'Intestine War' and 'The Smell of Mortal Change': Troping the Digestive Tract in Milton's Paradise Lost," The Sacred and Profane in English Renaissance Literature, ed. Mary A. Papazian (U of Delaware P, 2008), 278-300.
"Profeminism in Philip Sidney's Apologie for Poetrie," SEL 48 (2008): 23-43.
"Scatology and the Sacred in Milton's Paradise Lost," ELR 37 (2007): 429-49.
"Performing Woman: Female Theatricality in All's Well, That Ends Well," All's Well, That Ends Well: New Critical Essays, ed. Gary Waller (Routledge, 2007), 111-24.
"Incest and Empire in The Faerie Queene," ELH 73 (2006): 215-43.
"Uncertainty and the 'Sociable Spirit': Raphael's Role in Paradise Lost," Milton's Legacy, ed. Kristin Pruitt and Charles W. Durham (Susquehanna UP, 2005), 33-49.
@
|