Renée Trilling, Mapping the World in the Poems of Junius 11
When and Where
Speakers
Description
Friends of the PIMS Library presents their Spring Lecture, welcoming Renée Trilling, Angus Cameron Professor of Old English at the Centre for Medieval Studies and the Department of English at U of T, for a lecture titled, Mapping the World in the Poems of Junius 11. A Reception will follow in the Shook Common Room at PIMS (59 Queen’s Park Crescent East, Toronto, Ontario M5S 2C4)
Biography
Renée R. Trilling is Angus Cameron Professor of Old English at the University of Toronto. She specializes in the language, literature, and culture of England in the pre-Conquest period.
Her first monograph, The Aesthetics of Nostalgia: Historical Representation in Old English Verse (Toronto, 2009; winner of the International Society for the Study of Early Medieval England’s Best First Book Award), explores the relationship between poetic form and historical consciousness in early English vernacular verse. She is also author of the Oxford Bibliography of Old English Literature and Critical Theory (Oxford, 2016) and co-editor of A Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Studies (with Jacqueline A. Fay; Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), Textual Identities in Early Medieval England: Essays in Honour of Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe (with Jacqueline A. Fay and Rebecca Stephenson; D. S. Brewer, 2022) and Feminist Approaches to Early Medieval English Studies (with Robin Norris and Rebecca Stephenson; Amsterdam University Press, 2023). She is a former Editor for Old English of JEGP: Journal of English and Germanic Philology, published by the University of Illinois Press.
Her research has been supported by the Mellon Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Humanities Research Institute and Center for Advanced Study at Illinois. She has published articles on Beowulf, Wulfstan the Homilist, Ælfric’s hagiography, vernacular historiography, wisdom poetry, and early medieval medicine, focusing on issues of gender, materiality, nostalgia, and literary form. Her current work draws on posthumanist trends in neuroscience, quantum physics, and philosophy to explore the role of materiality in early medieval notions of subjectivity. Before coming to Toronto, she taught at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign from 2004 to 2023.