California Institute of Technology

Division of the Humanities and Social Sciences

Kristine L. Haugen's Publications
            Richard Bentley: Poetry and Enlightenment (Harvard, 2011).
 
            "Professors in Prison: Privation, Publicity, and the Care of the Self," under consideration for publication.
 
            "The Birth of Tragedy in the Cinquecento: Humanism and Literary History," forthcoming, Journal of the History of Ideas.   
 
            "Apocalypse (A User’s Manual): Joseph Mede, the Interpretation of Prophecy, and the Dream Book of Achmet," forthcoming, The Seventeenth Century.
 
            “Aristotle My Beloved: Poetry, Diagnosis, and the Dreams of Julius Caesar Scaliger,” Renaissance Quarterly 60,3 (2007): 819-47.*
 
            “Academic Charisma and the Old Regime,” History of Universities 22,1 (2007): 199-228.
 
            “Death of an Author: Constructions of Pseudonymy in the Battle of the Books,” in Faces of Anonymity: Anonymous and Pseudonymous Publication from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Century, ed. Robert J. Griffin (Ashgate, 2003).
 
            “Imaginary Correspondence: Epistolary Rhetoric and the Hermeneutics of Disbelief,” in Self-Presentation and Social Identification: The Rhetoric and Pragmatics of Letter Writing in Early Modern Times, eds. Toon Van Houdt, Jan Papy, Gilbert Tournoy, and Constant Matheeussen (Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2002), 117-34.
 
            “Transformations of the Trinity Doctrine in English Scholarship: From the History of Beliefs to the History of Texts,” Archiv für Religionsgeschichte 3 (2001): 149-68.
 
            “Chivalry and Romance in the Eighteenth Century: Richard Hurd and the Disenchantment of The Faerie Queene,” Prose Studies 23,2 (2000): 45-60.
 
            “Imagined Universities: Public Insult and the Terrae filius in Early Modern Oxford,” History of Universities 16,2 (2000): 1-31. 
 
            “A French Jesuit’s Lectures on Vergil, 1582-83: Jacques Sirmond between History, Literature, and Myth,” Sixteenth Century Journal 30,4 (1999): 967-985.*
 
            “Ossian and the Invention of Textual History,” Journal of the History of Ideas 59,2 (1998): 309-327.*
 
            “Joshua Barnes,” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
 
*"Aristotle My Beloved" received the Nelson Prize for the best article published in Renaissance Quarterly in 2007; "A French Jesuit's Lectures on Vergil" received the Roelker Prize for the best article published in Sixteenth Century Journal in 1999; "Ossian and the Invention of Textual History" received the Selma V. Forkosch Prize for the best article published in Journal of the History of Ideas in 1998.
 

Last updated: January 12, 2011 10:03
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