If you have a temporary address prior to returning to your permanent address, please include it below.
Did you complete/draft a certain number of chapters, complete a draft of the entire book, revise a certain portion of your project, make substantial progress, etc.? If your book is under contract, please indicate the publisher. If your book is forthcoming, please indicate the publisher and the expected date of publication, if known.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
Please separate keywords using commas.
The report you will write should be no more than a few sentences describing the progress on your project and any publications that were a direct result of your time at the Center (i.e. what you listed above). As you write your report, please follow the format of the example below.
Sample Report:
GORDON TESKEY (Resident Associate) drafted two chapters of his work in progress A New Theory of Shakespearean Mimesis. He revised, proofread, and indexed his book The Poetry of John Milton, which came out in June from Harvard University Press. He wrote several chapters for edited volumes: "Notes on Reading in The Faerie Queene: From Moment to Moment" for State of the Art Spenser, edited by Paul J. Hecht and J. B. Lethbridge; "Insideoutput: Milton’s Modernities" for Rethinking the Early Modern, edited by Feisal Mohamed and Patrick Fadely (Northwestern University Press, forthcoming); and "Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene" for The Blackwell Companion to Renaissance Poetry. He revised "Literary Theory" for Edmund Spenser in Context, edited by Andrew Escobedo, and "Prophecy Meets History: Frye’s Blake and Frye’s Milton" for Educating the Imagination, edited by Alan John Bewell, Neil ten Kortenaar, and Germaine Warkentin (forthcoming, 2016). His essay "The Thinking of History in Spenserian Romance" appeared in Romance and History, edited by Jon Whitman (Cambridge University Press, 2015). Teskey is professor of English at Harvard University.