Stróbl, Erzsébet

Stróbl, Erzsébet

Title: Dr
Gender: F
Year of Birth: 1970
Place of Birth (Country): Hungary
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Doctoral Studies
Year of Doctoral Defence (PhD / CSc): 2010
Discipline: English Renaissance and Baroque Literature Program, Department of Literature and Literary Theory
Title of Thesis: The Cult of Elizabeth - Ideology, Representation and Ritual
Issuing Institution: Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Humanities, Budapest

MA Studies
Year of Obtaining the MA Degree: 1993
Discipline(s): English Language and Literature
Issuing Institution: Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Humanities, Budapest

Further Studies and Qualifications

Institution Qualification Year of Obtaining the Qualification
     
     
     

Employment
Current Employer: Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities
Institute: Institute of English
Department: Department of Literary and Cultural Studies in English
Current Position(s): assistant lecturer

Previous Employer: Foreign Language Institute, Eötvös Lóránd University
Previous Position Held: part-time lecturer

Other Previous Employers: English and American Institute, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Piliscsaba
Other Previous Positions Held: part-time lecturer


Areas of Research and Teaching

Early Modern Cultural History of England
Cultural History and History of Britain and the United States
Civilization of Britain and the United States
Cultural History of Hungary
Irish film

Membership in Research Groups and Projects

The Tudor Symposium
The Hungarian Society for the Study of English
The Renaissance Research Group of Pázmány Péter Catholic University

Educational Functions, Curriculum Development and Other
Teaching-Related Activities

Period Function or Activity
   
   
   
   
   

Language Skills

Language Level and Kind of Proficiency
Hungarian native
English fluent
German near fluent
   
   

Honours, Distinctions, and Prizes

Name of Distinction Issuing Institution Year of Issuing
     
     
     

Membership in Academic Societies

Name of Organization Function (if any)
   
   
   
   

Guest Professorships and Research Fellowships in Foreign
Institutions

Period Institution Activities
     
     
     
     
     

Promotorship in Doctoral Studies

Name of
Doctoral Student,
Institution
Research Topic / Title of Dissertation Year of Defence
(if applicable)
     
     
     
     

Opponentship in Doctoral Defences

Name of
Doctoral Student,
Institution
Title of Dissertation Year of Defence
     
     
     
     

 

List of Publications

Monographs

 

Edited Books and Journals

Földváry, Kinga and Erzsébet Stróbl, eds. Early Modern Communi(cati)ons – Studies in Early Modern English Literature and Culture. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012.

Chapters in Books

“Entertaining the Queen at Woodstock, 1575.” In The Oxford Handbook of Tudor Drama. Edited by Thomas Betteridge and Greg Walker. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. 428-445.

 “The Queen and Death: An Elizabethan Book of Devotion.” In Early Modern Communi(cati)ons – Studies in Early Modern English Literature and Culture, edited by Kinga Földváry and Erzsébet Stróbl. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012. 10-31.

“Lunar Imagery and Royal Panegyric in John Lyly’s Plays” In: Iconology of Law and Order. Edited by Anna Kréchy, György E. Szőnyi, Attila Kiss. Szeged: University of Szeged, IEAS, 2012. 76-86.

 “Institutionalized Adoration: Prayers for and about Queen Elizabeth in Thomas Bentley's The Monument of Matrons (1582).” In:  New Perspective on Tudor Cultures. Edited by Mike Pincombe and Zsolt Almási. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012. 199-222.

 “Vizuális kultúra eseménynaptár 2012/13.” In Eseménynaptár a 2012/13-as tanévre.  Szerk. Bors Katalin. Budapest: Sík Sándor Tanáregylet, 2012. http://www.kpszti.hu/a/ esemenynaptar_2012_2013.pdf. 49-68.

“A Brief Introduction to the Visual Cultural Heritage of Hungary.” In: Small Miracles: A Look at the Cultural Similarities and Differences Between Americans and Hungarians. Ed. Gedeonné Sántha Mária. Budapest: Eötvös Collegium, 2011. 60-68.

“Vizuális kultúra eseménynaptár, 2011/2012.” In: Eseménynaptár a 2011/2012-es tanévre. Szerk. Bors Katalin. Budapest: Sík Sándor Tanáregylet, 2011. 52-68. 

“Művészettörténet eseménynaptár, 2010/2011.” In: Eseménynaptár a 2010/2011-es tanévre. Szerk. Bors Katalin. Budapest: Sík Sándor Tanáregylet, 2010. 59-76.

“I. Erzsébet korai kultusza – Egy példa a jelenlegi Erzsébet-kultusz kutatásokból. ” In: Anglisztika és amerikanisztika - magyar kutatások az ezredfordulón. Eds. Tibor Frank and Krisztina Károly. Budapest: Tinta Könyvkiadó, 2009. 99-108.

“The Figure of the Wild Man in the Entertainments of Elizabeth.” In: Writing the Other, Tudor Humanism /Barbarism.  Michael Pincombe and Zsolt Almási (eds.). Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008. 59-78.

Articles in Academic Reviews (Printed and Electronic)

 

Conference Proceedings (Printed and Electronic)

“Petrarchan Love or Politics? – Queen Elizabeth in the Poetry of Sir Walter Ralegh.” In: HUSSE10-LitCult, Proceedings of the HUSSE10 Conference : Literature and culture. Ed. Földváry Kinga, Almási Zsolt, Schandl Veronika. Debrecen: Hungarian Society for the Study of English, 2011. http://mek.oszk.hu/10100/10171. 25-36.

“The Development of the Cult of Elizabeth I.”  In: HUSSE 8 Webdocuments, University of Szeged Institute of English and American Studies. 2007 http://husse-esse.hu/wp-content/2007/07/2007husse-historical-guidline.doc 

“The Faerie Queen and the Progresses of Queen Elizabeth.” In: HUSSE Papers 2005. Ed. Jenő Bárdosi. Veszprém: Viza, 2006.  166-172.

Book Reviews

Wilhelm Ribhegge, Erasmus von Rotterdam, Darmstadt: Primus, 2010. – Book Review. In: The Sixteenth Century Journal 43.1 (2012): 266-267.

Louis Montrose, The Subject of Elizabeth: Authority, Gender, and Representation – Book Review. In: The Sixteenth Century Journal 38.4 (2007): 1210-11.

Annotations for Annotated Books of English Studies (ABES), Routledge:

Goldberg, Jonathan. “What Do Women Want: The Merry Wives of Windsor,” Criticism 51.3 (2009): 367-383.

Hume, Robert D.. “The Socio-Politics of London Comedy from Jonson to Steele” Huntington Library Quarterly, 74.2 (2011): 187-217. 

Hunt, Maurice. “The Garter Motto in The Merry Wives of Windsor,” SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, 50.2 (2010):  383-406.

Kingsley-Smith, Jane. Cupid in Early Modern Literature and Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).

Peele, George. The Troublesome Reign of John, King of England, The Revels Play Edition, ed. Charles R. Forker (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2011). 

Wilcox, Helen. “‘Ah Famous Citie’: Women, Writing, and Early Modern London,”  Feminist Review, 96 (2010): 20-40.

Translations

 

Creative Writing

 

Films and Multimedia (Digital Textbooks, Multimedia Creations etc.)

Discography

 

Organisation of Conferences

 

Academic and public Appearances (Live and Electronic)

HUSSDE, 2012, Piliscsaba– “The Woodstock Entertainment”

Representations of Ireland, 2012, Budapest – “The Device of the Savage Irish as a Form of Compliment to Queen Elizabeth”

HUSSE 9, 2011, Piliscsaba – “The Queen and Death: An Elizabethan Book of Devotion”

Tudor Symposium, 2009, Sheffield – “Prayers for the Queen, of the Queen, or to the Queen?” 

Conference of the Hungarian Society for the Study of English (HUSSE) 9, 2009, Pécs – “Petrarchan Love or Politics? – Queen Elizabeth in the Poetry of Sir Walter Ralegh”

Iconography East and West IV: The Iconology of Law and Order, International Conference, 2008, Szeged – “Lunar power and imperial imagery in John Lyly’s plays”

State of English, 2007, Budapest - “I. Erzsébet korai kultusza – Egy példa a jelenlegi Erzsébet-kultusz kutatásokból”

HUSSE 8, 2007, Szeged – “The Development of the Cult of Elizabeth I”

Tudor Symposium, 2006, Piliscsaba  – “The Role of the Wild Man in the Entertainments of Elizabeth I”

HUSSDE, 2006, Piliscsaba – “Conventions of the cult of Queen Elizabeth I in George Peele’s The Arraignment of Paris” 

HUSSE 7, 2005, Veszprém -“The Faerie Queen and the Progresses of Queen Elizabeth I”

Shakespeare and Philosophy International Conference, 2004, Budapest – “Rhetoric and Propaganda, The Self-Fashioning of Elizabeth I in her Public Speeches”

Events


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