Vanhoutte cv, p. XXX/10

Curriculum Vitae

Jacqueline A. Vanhoutte

Department of English 4310 Winnetka Street

1155 Union Circle #311307 Corinth, Texas 76208

University of North Texas Telephone: (940) 498-1958

Denton, Texas 76203-5017 Facsimile: (940) 565-4355

Electronic mail:

Personal:

Born in Ghent, Belgium, 1968.

Education:

Ph.D., English literature, University of Washington, 1996 (Dissertation: “Making England

True to Herself: Community and Gender in Early English Drama,” directed by John C. Coldewey)

M.A., English literature, University of Washington, 1992

B.A., magna cum laude, English literature, Carleton College, 1990

Academic Employment:

2015-present, Distinguished Teaching Professor, University of North Texas

2003-present, Associate Professor, University of North Texas

1998-2003, Assistant Professor, University of North Texas

1996-98, Visiting Assistant Professor, University of North Texas

1995-96, Adjunct Instructor, University of North Texas

1990-94, Teaching Assistant, University of Washington

1987-90, Writing Tutor, Carleton College

1986-90, French Tutor, Carleton College

Books:

Strange Communion: Motherland and Masculinity in Tudor Plays, Pamphlets, and Politics

(University of Delaware Press, 2003)

A Companion to Chaucer and His Contemporaries, with Laurel Amtower (Broadview, 2009) (4 chapters; 91pp. or circa 32000 words of original prose; 138 pp. or circa 45000 words of edited and translated primary documents, with introductory paragraphs. Many primary documents are not readily accessible elsewhere and were translated or edited for this volume. For example, the chapter on medieval science has 40 pp. of primary sources, roughly 70 % of which are in my translation or represent my editorial work).

Work in Progress:

Age in Love: Shakespeare at the Court of Elizabeth I, a new account of Elizabeth I’s influence on Shakespeare that focuses on the figure of the old man in love, which recurs in his plays and poems (e.g., Bottom, Armado, Malvolio, Claudius, Antony, Falstaff). A section of the first chapter appeared in Explorations in Renaissance Culture. A version of the second chapter won the Agnes Strickland Award from the Elizabeth I Society (2010) and the Competition for Papers in Open Submission from the Shakespeare Association of America (2011), and appeared in ELR (2013).

The manuscript is currently at 101,340 words; I have polished drafts of the introduction and the first three chapters and am well into a rough draft of the last chapter. I expect the final word count to be about 110,000. The manuscript should be ready for submission in June 2017.

Articles:

“Suzan-Lori Parks’s Venus and the Petrarchan Tradition,” Texas Studies in Language and

Literature (forthcoming Summer 2017) (20% acceptance to submission ratio) (14134

words)

“Denmark’s Rotting Reconsidered,” Philological Quarterly 91.3 (2013 for 2012): 393-410 (8%

acceptance to submission ratio) (7900 words)

“‘Age in Love’: Falstaff Among the Minions of the Moon,” English Literary Renaissance 43.1

(2013): 86-127 (8-10% acceptance to submission ratio) (16 550 words)

“The Itinerarium and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester,” in William Fleetwood's The

Itinerarium ad Windsor:A Critical Text and Contextual Essays, edited by Dennis

Moore and Charles Beem (Palgrave, 2013) (8000 words)

“Age in Lust: Lyly’s Endymion at the Court of Elizabeth I,” Explorations in Renaissance

Culture 37 (2011): 51-70. (20% acceptance to submission ratio) (8000 words)

“Something Rotten on the Stage in Chester,” in Thunder at a Playhouse: Essays on

Shakespeare and the Early Modern Stage, ed. Peter Kanelos and Matt Kozusko

(Susquehanna University Press, 2010), 234-248. (6000 words)

“Elizabeth I as Stepmother,” English Literary Renaissance 39 (2009): 315-335. (8-10%

acceptance to submission ratio) (6700 words)

“Enlightening the Renaissance,” 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries10 (2004): 219-

224 (1745 words)

“Queen or Country?: Female Monarchs and Feminized Nations in Tudor Political Pamphlets,”

in Elizabeth I: Always Her Own Free Woman, ed. Debbie Barret-Graves, Jo Eldridge

Carney, and Carole Levin (Burlington: Ashgate, 2003): 7-19.

“A Strange Hatred of Marriage: John Lyly, Elizabeth I and the Ends of Comedy,” in The

Single Woman in Medieval and Early Modern England: Her Life and Representation,

ed. Laurel Amtower and Dorothea Kehler, Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 30, (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2004): 97-118.

“Cancer and the Common Woman in Margaret Edson’s Wit,” Comparative Drama 36 (2002-

2003): 391-410.

“Antony’s ‘Secret House of Death’: Suicide and Sovereignty in Antony and Cleopatra,”

Philological Quarterly 79 (2000): 153-175. Reprinted in Shakespeare Criticism 91

(Gale, 2005); and in Antony and Cleopatra, ed. Harold Bloom, Shakespeare through

the Ages (Chelsea House, 2008).

“Community, Authority, and the Motherland in Sackville and Norton’s Gorboduc,” SEL:

Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 40 (2000): 227-239. Reprinted in Literature

Criticism 1400-1600 (Gale, 2003).

“Engendering England: The Restructuring of Allegiance in the Writings of Richard Morison

and John Bale,” Renaissance and Reformation 20 (1996): 49-78.

“Sacrifice, Violence, and the Virgin Queen in Lyly’s Gallathea,” Cahiers Elisabéthains 49

(1996): 1-14.

“When Elckerlijc Becomes Everyman: Translating from Dutch to English, from Performance

to Print,” Studies in the Humanities 22 (1995): 100-115.

Salome’s Earnestness,” Text and Presentation 13 (1992): 83-87.

Special Issue:

“Enlightening the Renaissance,” a cluster of essays on relations between Renaissance and

Eighteenth-century literature, 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries 10 (2004). Ed. Vanhoutte.

Book Reviews:

The Subject of Elizabeth: Authority, Gender and Representation, by Louis Montrose; Year in

English Studies 38 (2008).

Queen Elizabeth: Past and Present, edited by Christa Jansohn; Modern Language Review 101.4

(October 2006).

The Idolatrous Eye: Iconoclasm and Theater in Early Modern England, by Michael O’Connell;

Early Theatre 7.1 (2004): 126-128.

Fashioning Authority: The Development of Elizabethan Novelistic Discourse, by Constance C.

Relihan; Studies in the Novel 27 (1995): 587-89

Notes:

"Bob Dylan and The Emperor Jones Revisited," with Alexander Pettit and Jim Baird, The

Eugene O'Neill Review 33 (2012): 273-274.

Research Interests:

Renaissance Literature

Middle English literature

Gender Studies

Cultural Studies

Undergraduate Courses Taught at the University of Washington:

Writing about Literature (English 111)

Writing about Social Issues (English 121)

Expository Writing (English 131)

Reading Fiction (English 206)

Reading Drama (English 208)

Introduction to Shakespeare (English 231), section instructor

Intermediate Expository Writing (English 271)

Undergraduate Courses Taught at the University of North Texas:

College Writing, honors section (English 1310)

World Literature I (English 2210)

World Literature II, honors section (English 2221)

Classical Literature (English 3360)

British Literature to 1780 (English 3410)

“Sex and Gender in Shakespeare’s England” (English 3430)

“Tudor Court Literature (English 3900)

“Shakespeare’s Rivals” (English 3430)

World Drama (English 4290)

Modern Drama (English 4300)

Shakespeare (English 4430)

British Drama (English 4470)

American Drama (English 4480)

Graduate Courses Taught at the University of North Texas:

Contemporary American Drama (English 5530)

“British Comedy from Lyly to Wilde” (English 5800)

“The History Play in the Age of Shakespeare” (English 5800)

“Approaches to Teaching Shakespeare” (English 5400)

“Scholarly Writing” (English 5760)

“Shakespeare after 1600: The Critical Tradition” (English 5400)

“The Sonnet from Petrarch to Donne” (English 5800 or 5410)

“Elizabeth I: The Cult of the Virgin Queen” (English 6200)

“Roman Shakespeare” (English 5400)

“Shakespeare’s Rivals” (5410)

“Shakespeare’s Comedies” (English 5400)

“Shakespeare’s Tragedies” (English 5400)

“Tudor Court Literature (5410)

“Elizabeth I and Shakespeare” (English 6200)

“The Plays of Thomas Middleton” (English 6200)

“Shakespeare’s Comedies” (English 5400)

Teaching Awards:

2015-2016, GSEA Professor of the Year

2015-present, UNT Distinguished Teaching Professor

2013-2014, J. H. Shelton Excellence in Teaching Award ($1500)

2012-2013, GSEA Professor of the Year

2010-2011, Preston Award for Outstanding Undergraduate Teaching

2008-2009, Inspiring Excellence through Honors Teaching Award, awarded by UNT

Honors College

2003-2004, Pursuit of Excellence in Teaching Award, awarded annually by UNT’s University

Forum on Teaching and Learning Assessment ($2000)

1997-98, Professing Women Award, awarded annually by the University of North Texas Women’s Studies Roundtable

Research Awards, Grants, and Fellowships:

2013-2014, Faculty Development Leave for Age in Love, University of North Texas

2010-2011, RCE Grant, University of North Texas ($9855.55)

2010-2011, Agnes Strickland Prize for the Best Essay, to “Old Men in Love: Falstaff at the

Court of Elizabeth I,” Elizabeth I Society, March 2010

2008-2009, RCE Grant, University of North Texas ($9700)

2006-2007, Faculty Development Leave, awarded for work towards Chaucer and His

Contemporaries

2005-2006, Small Grant, University of North Texas ($950)

2003-2004, Research Opportunities Grant, University of North Texas ($3500)

2001-2002, Small Grant, University of North Texas ($1000)

2000-2001, Small Grant, University of North Texas ($750)

1999-2000, Junior Faculty Summer Research Grant, University of North Texas ($5000)

1998-99, Research Initiation Grant, University of North Texas ($2000)

1995-96, Departmental Honors for dissertation, University of Washington

1994-95, Alvord Fellowship in the Humanities, University of Washington, ($10,000)

1992-93, Hallien Johnson Memorial Fellowship in Women and Literary Studies, University of

Washington ($500, awarded for an outstanding Master’s essay on a woman writer, portrayals of women in literature, or in feminist criticism and theory)

1989-90, Margaret Curran Dalton Award, Carleton College ($100, awarded for the best

academic essay)

1989-90, Phi Beta Kappa, Carleton College Chapter

1986-90, National Merit Scholar

Service Awards

2014-2015, Nomination for Ulys & Vera Knight Faculty Mentor Award

2013-2014, Nomination for Ulys & Vera Knight Faculty Mentor Award

2012-2013, Nomination for Ulys & Vera Knight Faculty Mentor Award

2010-2011, Stevens Award for Outstanding Service to the Department

Plenary Lectures, Invited Lectures, and Invited Appearances:

“The Past is Another Country,” GSEA Conference, Denton, Texas, April 2016

“‘Shew Him in Love’: Falstaff Among the Minions of the Moon,” Papers Selected in the Open

Submission Competition, Shakespeare Association of America, Bellevue, Washington, April 2011.

“Age in Love,” Keynote Lecture, Central Arkansas University Graduate Student Conference,

Little Rock, April 2011

“Age in Love; or, Sir John Falstaff at the Court of Elizabeth I,” University of Hong Kong,

Hong Kong, China, January 2011

“Age in Love,” Stanley March III lecture on Shakespeare, West Texas A & M, Texas, April

2010

“Age in Love,” UNT Medieval and Renaissance Colloquium, Denton, Texas, March 2010

“Age in Love,” Elizabeth I Society, South Central Society for Renaissance Studies,

Arkansas, March 2009

“The Future of Shakespeare,” roundtable moderated by Stephen Greenblatt, Oklahoma, March

2008

“Surrogate Parenthood and Political Tyranny in Tudor Plays,” University of Michigan, Spring

2005

“‘Cynthia is No Stepmother’: Surrogate Parenthood at the Court of Elizabeth I,” Plenary

Address, Elizabeth I Society, Austin, Texas, April 2004

“Cancer and the Common Woman: Tragic Conventions in Margaret Edson’s Wit,” Carleton

College, May 2003

“Motherland Tropes in Renaissance Literature,” Carleton College, May 2003

Papers Presented:

“Marcus Antonius, Shakespeare’s Antony, and the Queen’s Men,” Elizabeth I Society, Austin,

Texas, April 2017

“Twelfth Night’s ‘Reliques’ and ‘Memorials,’” Renaissance Society of America, Chicago,

Illinois, March 2017

“What’s at Stake in Twelfth Night,” Shakespeare Association of America, Vancouver, British

Columbia, April 2015

“Remembering Falstaff in Twelfth Night,” Elizabeth I Society (in conjunction with South-

Central Renaissance Society,) Raleigh, North Carolina, March 2015

“Looking for ‘Great Princes’ Favorites’ in Shakespeare’s Sonnets,” Elizabeth I Society (in

conjunction with South-Central Renaissance Society), Tucson, Arizona, April 2014

“A Lazar-like Ghost?,” plenary panel, Blackfriars Convention, Staunton, Virginia, October

2013

“Age as Ovidian Metamorphosis in Antony and Cleopatra,” European Shakespeare Research

Association, Montpellier, France, June 2013

“Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester and the Itinerarium ad Windsor,” Elizabeth I Society

Convention (in conjunction with South Central Renaissance Conference), Omaha, Nebraska, March 2013

“Performing Age in the Sonnets,” Shakespeare Association of America, Boston, April 2012

“OP and PST: Separated at Birth?,” Blackfriars Convention, Staunton, Virginia, October 2011

“Old Men in Love: Falstaff at the Court of Elizabeth I,” Elizabeth I Society (in conjunction

with South-Central Renaissance Society) Convention, Corpus Christi, Texas, March

2010

“Age in Love: The Case of Lyly’s Endymion,” Blackfriars Convention, Staunton, Virginia,

October 2009

“Denmark’s Rotting Reconsidered: Hamlet and Leprosy,” Shakespeare Association of

America, April 2009

“Something Rotten on the Stage in Chester,” Blackfriars Convention, Staunton, Virginia,

October 2007

“Figuring Flanders from the Wife of Bath to The Dutch Courtesan,” Shakespeare Association

of America, San Diego, April 2007

“Whose ‘Stepdame’?: Surrogate Parenthood and Political Tyranny in Tudor Plays,”

Shakespeare Association of America, Bermuda, March 2004

“Masculinity and Militarism on the Renaissance Stage,” American Comparative Literature

Association, San Diego, April 2003

“Staging The Country Wife,” South-Central Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Fort

Worth, February 2003

“Gender, Politics, Nation,” Seminar on Masculinity and Violence, Shakespeare Association of

America, Minneapolis, March 2002

“Defining the ‘True-Born Englishman’: Motherland and Masculinity in Shakespeare’s History

Plays,” Seminar on Early Modern Man, World Shakespeare Conference, Valencia, Spain April 2001

“Reading Decomposing Bodies in the Chester Cycle: An Anthropological Approach,”

SCMLA Convention, San Antonio, November 2000

“Queen or Country?: Female Monarchs and Feminized Nations in Tudor Political Pamphlets,”

Seminar on Queenship in the Renaissance, Shakespeare Association of America,

Montréal, April 2000

“Teaching Drama,” GSEA Talks about Teaching, University of North Texas, November 1999

“Evanescent Materiality: The Cases of Herod and Salome in the Chester Cycle,” Annual

International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, May 1999

“Teaching the Renaissance,” GSEA Talks about Teaching, University of North Texas,

February 24, 1999

“Community, Sovereignty, and the Maternal Body Politic in Sackville and Norton’s Gorboduc,” Western Conference for British Studies, Fort Worth, October 1997

“Tartuffe and Tyranny,” Roundtable on the occasion of the Theatre and Dance Department’s

production of Tartuffe, University of North Texas, April 1997

“How Antony’s Valor Triumphs over Itself: Masculinity and Transcendence in Antony and

Cleopatra,” Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies Conference, Pittsburgh,

September 1996

“How England Became True to Itself: Conflicted Histories, Civil Dissension, and

Constructions of Nationhood in Early Modern English Drama,” Western Humanities

Conference, Santa Barbara, October 1995

“John Bale’s King Johan and the Mediation of Imagined Communities,” Annual International