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Indiana University Bloomington

Sarah Van der LaanSarah Van der Laan

Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature

Education

Ph.D. in Renaissance Studies and English, Yale University, 2008
M.A. in Renaissance Studies, Queen Mary College, University of London, 2002
M.A. in Intellectual and Cultural History, Queen Mary College, University of London, 2002
B.A. in Renaissance Studies, Yale University, 2000

(812) 855-0737

Ballantine Hall 919

spvander at indiana.edu

I write and teach about the culture of the European Renaissance. My work focuses on the interdisciplinary study of the interactions between literature, music, art, and architecture, and of the interactions of those cultural products with the material and social contexts in which they took shape. I am currently working on a book that explores the reception of the Odyssey in Renaissance Europe and situates the rewritings of Homer’s epic by major European artists in the context of the cultural history of the Odyssey. My project thus provides new readings of major works by poets and musicians including Lodovico Ariosto, Torquato Tasso, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Claudio Monteverdi, and John Milton, while at the same time shedding light on a neglected area of the history of the early modern book.

My interest in the materiality of Renaissance texts has been fed by my work as a research assistant for The Textual Life of William Shakespeare, a research project headed by Lukas Erne at the Université de Genève, and by my ongoing role as an Associate Scholar of the Centre for Editing Lives and Letters, Queen Mary College, University of London. Other interests and future projects include the roles of madrigal and opera in various literary traditions, the interplay of epic and mock-epic, and the development of early modern concepts of tyrannicide in theoretical and imaginative literature.

Research Highlights

What Virtue and Wisdom Can Do: Homer’s Odyssey in the Renaissance Imagination (book manuscript in progress)

“Milton’s Odyssean Ethics: Homeric Allusions and Arminian Thought in Paradise Lost,” Milton Studies 49 (2009).

Recent Courses

Selected Honors and Awards