Dr Erin Maglaque
D.Phil. (Oxford)
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Lecturer in Early Modern European History
+44 114 222 2615
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
91Ö±²¥
S3 7RA
- Profile
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I completed my D.Phil at Oxford in 2015, before spending three further years in Oxford as a Junior Research Fellow at Oriel College. I then spent a year as a lecturer at the University of St Andrews, before joining 91Ö±²¥ in 2018.
I am a historian of early modern Europe, particularly the cultural history of early modern Italy. My first book, Venice’s Intimate Empire: Family Life and Scholarship in the Renaissance Mediterranean was published by Cornell University Press in 2018.
- Research interests
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I am a cultural historian of Italy in the early modern period. My research contains two strands: first, Italy's transnational connections across the Mediterranean; and secondly, the relationship between gender, family, and political culture in the early modern period.
My first book, Venice’s Intimate Empire: Family Life and Scholarship in the Renaissance Mediterranean (Cornell University Press in 2018) focuses on the early modern Venetian empire, which extended from the Venetian lagoon to Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean. The book draws on private writings, humanist geographies, letters, and the extensive Venetian archives to piece together the ways in which Venetian governing families experienced and negotiated Venice’s Mediterranean empire. It is particularly interested in integrating gender and family history into our understanding of the political culture of empire.
I am embarking on new research that unites these interests in gender and the family into the history of Italy's multi-ethnic, multi-confessional early modern past.
- Publications
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Books
- Venice's intimate empire: Family life and scholarship in the renaissance mediterranean. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Journal articles
- THE WIFE OF BATH A Biography. NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, 128, 9-9.
- WHAT THE ERMINE SAW The Extraordinary Journey of Leonardo da Vinci's Most Mysterious Portrait. NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, 127, 44-44.
- . Italian Studies, 73(1), 1-18.
- . Journal of Early Modern History, 19(1), 45-70.
- Care Work and the Family in Catholic Reformation Tuscany. Past and Present.
Chapters
- , SACRED PRECINCTS: THE RELIGIOUS ARCHITECTURE OF NON-MUSLIM COMMUNITIES ACROSS THE ISLAMIC WORLD (pp. 143-157).
- Abortion's Past In Spawls A & Bonhomme E (Ed.), After Sex Silver Press
Book reviews
- Unwanted Thoughts. The New York review of books.
- I feel sorry for sex. London Review of Books.
- Dante’s Little Book. London Review of Books.
- Rome Was His Laboratory. The New York review of books.
- Red love, for all. The New Statesman.
- Promises, Promises: The Love Plot. London Review of Books.
- 'Monstrous' or 'Prudente'?. The New York review of books.
- Pigs, Pre-Roasted: Lazy-delicious-land. London Review of Books.
- The future of lockdown. The New Statesman.
- Ten Small Raisins: Sweat or Inky Fingers?. London Review of Books.
- Like a Slice of Ham: Unpregnancy. London Review of Books.
- Down with Occurrences: Baroque Excess. London Review of Books.
- The radical legacy of Shulamith Firestone. The New Statesman.
- Free from Humbug: The Murdrous Machiavel. London Review of Books.
- Inclined to Putrefaction: In Quarantine. London Review of Books.
- . The English Historical Review, 132(558), 1283-1284.
- . The English Historical Review, 132(557), 967-969.
- . The English Historical Review, 131(551), 894-896.
- . The English Historical Review, 131(549), 427-429.
- . The English Historical Review, 131(548), 168-170.
- . Imago Mundi, 68(1), 108-109.
- . European History Quarterly, 46(1), 166-168.
- . The English Historical Review, 130(543), 429-431.
- Research group
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Research supervision
I am happy to supervise students interested in any aspect of early modern European history, in particular those with interests in Italy or the Mediterranean world, empire, political culture, or gender.
- Teaching activities
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Undergraduate:
- HST112 - Paths from Antiquity to Modernity
- HST115 - The ‘Disenchantment’ of Early Modern Europe
- HST246 - Gender, Culture and Society in Britain 1650-1850
- HST2517 - Culture in Early Modern Europe
- HST3000 - The Uses of History
- Public engagement
I co-curated the 2015 exhibition ‘Boomtown: Silver and Science, Riches and Radicalism in Renaissance Bohemia’ at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.