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Fiona SomersetFiona Somerset  
Associate Professor

Office Location: On leave 2012-2013
Email Address: somerset@duke.edu

Education:

Ph.D., Cornell University

Visiting student, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford

Visiting student, Clare Hall, Cambridge

M.A., Cornell University

A.B. with Special Honours, University of Chicago

degree credit applied to U. of Chicago A.B., Cleveland Institute of Music
Specialties:

Medieval Literature
British Literature
Fiona Somerset is interested in what happens when people read books—and perhaps even more interested in what people imagine might happen if more people were to read books. These interests have led her to work on history of the book, multilingualism, cultural theory, legal history, medieval philosophy, historiography, and the history of emotion. She has written extensively about Wycliffism, or lollardy, a religious reform movement in late medieval England that was persecuted as a heresy. She has also written about Chaucer's poetry, Piers Plowman, the translations of John Trevisa, Lydgate, emotions in mysticism, and Margery Kempe. She is the author of Clerical Discourse and Lay Audience in Late Medieval England (Cambridge U.P., 1998) and Four Wycliffite Dialogues EETS 333 (Oxford U.P., 2009), and her Classics of Western Spirituality volume on Wycliffite Spirituality (with J. Patrick Hornbeck and Stephen Lahey) is in press. She has edited two essay collections: The Vulgar Tongue: Medieval and Post-Medieval Vernacularity (with Nicholas Watson), and Lollards and their Influence (with Jill Havens and Derrick Pitard). She is now finishing a monograph on the writings of the lollard movement, Feeling Like Saints, and researching a new book on medieval social consent from 1100-1500. She is developing a digital humanities project for the collaborative, comparative study of highly variable texts in manuscript culture, and is co-editor of The Yearbook of Langland Studies.

Representative Publications   (More Publications)

  1.  Four Wycliffite Dialogues. EETS 333, Oxford U P, 2009. (Critical edition of four previously unpublished Middle English texts complete with manuscript descriptions, analysis of dialects, critical apparatus, extensive explanatory notes, and glossary)
  2. F. Somerset. "Afterword." Wycliffite Controversies. Ed. Mishtooni Bose and J. Patrick Hornbeck II. Brepols, 2011. 319-33.
  3. F. Somerset. "Censorship." The Production of Books in England, 1350-1530. Ed. Alexandra Gillespie and Daniel Wakelin. Cambridge University Press, 2010. 239-58.
  4. "‘Hard is with seyntis for to make affray:’ Lydgate the Poet-Propagandist as Hagiographer." John Lydgate: Poetry, Culture and Lancastrian England. Ed. Lawrence Scanlon and James Simpson. University of Notre Dame Press, Spring, 2006.
  5. "‘Al þe comonys with on voys at onys’: Multilingual Latin and Vernacular Voice in Piers Plowman." Yearbook of Langland Studies Ed. Andrew Cole, Fiona Somerset, and Lawrence Warner. 19Medieval Institute Publications, (2006): 107-36.  [abs]
  6. "Wycliffite Spirituality." Text and Controversy in the Middle Ages: Essays in Honour of Anne Hudson Ed. Helen Barr and Anne Hutchinson.  (January, 2005): 375-86.
  7.  The Vulgar Tongue: Medieval and Postmedieval Vernacularity.  Penn State U P, 2003
  8. "Excitative Speech: Theories of Emotive Response from Richard Fitzralph to Margery Kempe." The Vernacular Spirit: Essays on Medieval Religious Literature. Ed. Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski, Duncan Robertson, and Nancy Warren. Palgrave, 2002. 59-79.
  9.  Clerical Discourse and Lay Audience in Late Medieval England. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature 37 Cambridge U P, 1998.

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