Who was spreading fake news in Renaissance Italy? Were intellectuals using it to serve their patrons' ideology, or resist it?
Dario Brancato
- Renaissance literature6
- digital humanities9
- Renaissance Florence
- Italian history and culture4
- philology6
- Italian Renaissance
- historical linguistics
- Italian language2
- Boethius
- manuscripts8
- Classical studies2
- medieval multilingualism2
- comparative literature10
- Renaissance humanism2
- print culture11
- translation studies15
- Italian dialectology
- early modernity21
- corpus linguistics2
- history of the book5
-
Steven Stowell
Renaissance art, sacred art, medieval art
-
Bradley J. Nelson
Hispanic literature and culture, social impacts of technology, history of science
-
Jason Camlot
poetry, Victorian era, sound studies
-
Ted McCormick
early modern Europe, history of policy, history of science
-
Ivana Djordjevic
literary history, Middle Ages, romance
-
Daniel O'Leary
Canadian studies, Canadian literature, history of the book
-
Danielle Bobker
British literature, 18th century, Restoration
-
Kevin Pask
Renaissance literature, making publics, popular culture
-
Darragh Languay
Renaissance literature, Shakespeare, Milton
-
Sophie Marcotte
Gabrielle Roy, littérature québécoise, manuscripts
-
Roberto Viereck Salinas
colonialism, Latin American studies, contemporary poetry
-
Elena Benelli
migrant literature, immigration to Italy, Italian history and culture
-
Stephen Yeager
medieval literature, literature studies, poetry
-
Pier-Pascale Boulanger
economic/financial translation, financial news, translating terminology
-
Stephen Powell
medieval literature, Chaucer, romance
-
Rachel Harris
visual culture, history of the book, scholarly communication
-
Stephen Ross
poetry, modernism, American literature
-
Máirtín Coilféir
Irish language, Irish literature, modern Irish literature
-
Meredith Evans
Renaissance literature, Shakespeare, Milton
-
Jean-Michel Roessli
Christianity, church history, Sibylline Oracles
-
Geoffrey Robert Little
scholarly communication, Concordia University Press, history of libraries
-
Debbie Folaron
translation technologies, localization, translation studies