Peter Stallybrass
Director of History of the Book

Fisher-Bennett Hall 216
215-898-7348

Office Hours: Mondays 9-11

Peter Stallybrass is Walter H. and Leonore C. Annenberg Professor in the Humanities and Professor of English and of Comparative Literature and Literary Theory. For the last fourteen years, he has directed the seminar on the History of Material Texts, and he co-edits the Material Texts series for the University of Pennsylvania Press. While training as a mortician, he became obsessed with Dostoevsky’s novels and, under the mistaken impression that he would have more time to read at university, applied to Sussex University in England. Peter was an undergraduate, a graduate, and a professor at Sussex, where he directed the graduate program in Renaissance Studies and the faculty/graduate seminar in Critical Theory. In 1984, he co-founded the Popular Literature Group at the Centre for Social History in Oxford, organizing conferences on Romance and Detective Fiction.

 

In 1978, he visited the United States for the first time to teach at Smith College, where he met Ann Rosalind Jones. After eight years of commuting across the Atlantic, he moved to Dartmouth College in 1986 and, in 1988, to the University of Pennsylvania, where he has been ever since, with visiting positions at the University of London, and, as Directeur d’Études, at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris. He has received fellowships from the American Council for Learned Societies, the Society for the Humanities at Cornell University, the Folger Shakespeare Library, the Globe Theater, London, the Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, and the Guggenheim Foundation. In 1999, he was chair of the English Institute at Harvard University, and he has been a Trustee of the Institute since 2002.

Most of Peter’s early work was on literary and cultural theory, and he published The Politics and Poetics of Transgression, co-written with Allon White, in 1986. His continuing interest in this field has led to a book on Marx, materiality, and memory, published in Brazil in 1999 under the title O Casaco de Marx: Roupas, Memória, Dor. His interest in material culture took a new turn after the death of Allon White and the particular problems of disposing of a friend’s clothes. As a memorial lecture for Allon, he wrote "Worn Worlds: Clothes, Mourning, and the Life of Things,” which led him to a collaboration with Ann Rosalind Jones on Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory, published by Cambridge University Press and awarded the James Russell Lowell prize by the MLA in 2001.

In 1993, Peter founded the seminar on the History of Material Texts, which has been meeting weekly ever since, and has brought together academics, librarians, writers, artists, and anyone interested in books and other cultural technologies. Peter’s interest in the history of books began when he read Magreta de Grazia’s Shakespeare Verbatim, and, drawing upon many of the ideas in that book, he wrote with her “The Materiality of the Shakespearean Text” (Shakespeare Quarterly 1993). He also began to teach a graduate class that met in and drew upon the wealth of Philadelphia’s libraries, including the Library Company of Philadelphia, the Rosenbach Library, and the Free Library, in addition to the University’s libraries. Since Roger Chartier was appointed to the History Department in 2000, he and Peter have been regularly teaching an undergraduate seminar on “Reading, Writing, and Printing.” Teaching Hamlet, they discovered the material basis of Hamlet’s erasable “tables of the mind” in the Folger Shakespeare Library and, together with Frank Mowery, the Folger’s Head of Conservation, and Heather Wolfe, the Folger’s Curator of Manuscripts, wrote "Hamlet's Tables and the Technologies of Writing in Renaissance England" (Shakespeare Quarterly 2004).

Peter’s work at Benjamin Franklin’s Library, the Library Company, led him to collaborate with Jim Green, the librarian, on exhibitions on “Material Texts” and on “Benjamin Franklin: Writer and Printer,” and on a book on Franklin that was published by the Library Company, the British Library, and Oak Knoll in 2006. He also collaborated with Heather Wolfe in 2006 on an exhibition on “Technologies of Writing in the Renaissance” at the Folger Shakespeare Library. His 2006 A. S. W. Rosenbach lectures on “Printing-for-Manuscript” will be published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.

In 2007, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society, this country’s first learned society, founded by Franklin in 1743.


Faculty Awards
(more)
2009 The Dean's Award for Mentoring Undergraduate Research
recipient
2000 The Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching
recipient
1997 The Ira Abrams Award for Distinguished Teaching
recipient

Coursework
English234.401Topics in the History of the Book: Reading, Writing, and Printing in Early Modern England, Europe, and America - Spring 2010
English590.401The Bible and Religious Literature - Spring 2010
English590.401The Bible and Religious Literature - Spring 2010
English034.401Introduction to the History of the Book: Cultures of the Book - Fall 2009
English034.401Intro to Print Culture - Spring 2009
English234.401The Making and Meaning of Books in Renaissance England - Fall 2008
English735.301Renaissance Studies - Fall 2008
English034.401Cultures of the Book - Spring 2008
English234.401Topics in the History of the Book: Reading and Writing in Renaissance England - Fall 2007
English597.401Shakespeare: Script, Part, Pamphlet, Book - Fall 2007
English597.401Shakespeare: Script, Part, Pamphlet, Book - Fall 2007
English034.401Cultures of the Book: Practices, Materials, Places - Spring 2007
English736.401Reading, Writing, and Printing in England and America: 1600-2007 - Spring 2007
English234.401Topics in History of the Book: Reading, Writing, Printing, & the Formation of the Self in the Renaissance - Fall 2006
English034.001Cultures of the Book: Reading, Writing, and Printing in Early Modern England & America - Spring 2006
English232.30117th Century Poetry: Metaphysicals to Milton - Fall 2005
English736.401Reading, Writing, and Printing in Early Modern Europe and America - Spring 2004
English101.001Shakespeare - Fall 2003
English297.401The History of Print Culture: In Early Modern Europe and America - Spring 2003
English736.301Reading, Writing, and Printing in Early Modern England and America - Fall 2002
English297.401History of the Books, 15th -18th Century - Spring 2002
English736.401Reading, Writing, and Printing in Early Modern England - Fall 2001
English297.401History of Print Culture - Spring 2001
English736.401 Renaissance Materialities - Fall 2000
English101.001Shakespeare - Fall 2000
English204.401Literary Theory - Spring 2000
English771.401 Writing and Materiality - Spring 2000
English231.301Renaissance Poetry - Fall 1999
English101.001Shakespeare - Fall 1999
English071.401Cultures of the Book - Spring 1998
English101.001Shakespeare - Spring 1998
English771.401 Writing and Materiality - Fall 1997
English231.301 Renaissance Poetry - Fall 1997
English037.001Shakespeare Tragedies - Spring 1997
English038.001Milton - Spring 1997
English771.401Textual Production - Fall 1996
English101.001Shakespeare - Fall 1996
English771.401Textual Production - Spring 1995
English235.301Shakespeare, Clothes and Identity - Spring 1995
English590.401Writing and Materiality - Fall 1994
English590.401Writing and Materiality - Fall 1994
English095.001Introduction to Cultural Studies - Fall 1994
English771.401Literature Value & Evaluation - Fall 1993
English035.001Shakespeare - Fall 1993
English590.401Writing & Materiality - Spring 1993
English590.401Writing & Materiality - Spring 1993
English231.301Renaissance Poetry - Spring 1993
English771.401Cultrural Theory/Literary Production - Fall 1992
English095.001Cultural Studies - Fall 1992
English771.401Literature Value & Evaluation - Spring 1991
English235.301Shakespeare - Spring 1991
English739.301Milton - Fall 1990
English735.301Shakespeare - Spring 1990
English235.000Topics in Shakespeare - Spring 1989
English735.000Shakespeare - Spring 1989

 
 
 
 


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Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
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