Sebastian Sobecki
Sebastian Sobecki (born 1973) is a medievalist specialising in English literature, history, and manuscript studies.
Biography
Sobecki is Professor of Medieval English Literature and Culture at the University of Groningen, the oldest chair (founded in 1886) for English literature in the Netherlands.[1] He also holds by courtesy the Professorship of Old Germanic, established in 1881. Having received his education at the University of Cambridge, Sobecki became an Assistant Professor at McGill University before being appointed at Groningen. He works on medieval English and early Tudor literature, particularly on Chaucer and Gower, fifteenth-century literature, manuscripts and scribes, law and politics, and travel and Anglo-European relations. Sobecki was awarded the John Hurt Fisher Prize by the John Gower Society and has held fellowships from Yale University, All Souls College Oxford, and the Huntington Library.[2][3]
Sobecki has written widely on medieval and early modern topics, and his articles have appeared in leading journals, including Speculum, English Literary History, Studies in the Age of Chaucer, Renaissance Studies, The English Historical Review, The Chaucer Review, The Library, New Medieval Literatures, and The Review of English Studies.[4] Together with Michelle Karnes (University of Notre Dame), Sobecki is the editor of the journal Studies in the Age of Chaucer.[5] He is completing his third monograph, Last Words: The Public Self and the Social Author in Late Medieval England (Oxford University Press), and two volumes in the Oxford edition of Richard Hakluyt's Principal Navigations.[6] Sobecki is also editing Medieval Travel Writing: A Global History (Cambridge University Press).[7]
He has made a number of important archival discoveries, such as identifying John Gower's autograph hand,[8] finding a letter written for Margery Kempe's son,[9] locating rebels linked to Piers Plowman,[10] revealing the author (John Peyton) of the earliest English description of Poland,[11][12] and demonstrating connections between tax records and the General Prologue to Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.[13] Sobecki is also the voice behind the popular video recording of John Skelton's 'Speke Parott'.[14][15]
Selected publications
- Last Words: The Public Self and the Social Author in Late Medieval England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019 ISBN 9780198790785, 9780198790778
- The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Law and Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019) (with Candace Barrington) ISBN 9781316632345
- Medieval English Travel: A Critical Anthology (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019) (with Anthony Bale) ISBN 9780198733782
- A Critical Companion to John Skelton (Cambridge: D.S Brewer, 2018) (with John Scattergood) ISBN 9781843845133
- Unwritten Verities: The Making of England’s Vernacular Legal Culture, 1463-1549, ReFormations: Medieval and Early Modern (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2015) ISBN 9780268041458
- The Sea and Englishness in the Middle Ages: Maritime Narratives, Identity, and Culture (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 2011) ISBN 9781843842767
- The Sea and Medieval English Literature, Studies in Medieval Romance (Cambridge: Brewer, 2008) ISBN 9781843841371
References
- Bunt, Gerrit (1986). One Hundred Years of English Studies in Dutch Universities: Seventeen Papers Read at the Centenary Conference, Groningen, 15-16 January 1986. Rodopi. ISBN 978-9062037896. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "Department of English, University of Groningen". Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "John Hurt Fisher Prize". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- "Department of English, University of Groningen, Sobecki, Publications". Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "Studies in the Age of Chaucer (SAC)". Retrieved 2019-01-04.
- "Hakluyt Editorial Project". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- "Department of English, University of Groningen, Sobecki, Projects". Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "John Gower's Handwriting identified". 2015-10-22. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- Flood, Alison (2015-05-08). "Archive find shows medieval mystic Margery Kempe's autobiography 'doesn't lie'". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "Poaching with Piers Plowman". 2018-02-09. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- Thake, Adam Steedman (2015-06-09). "Espionage in Early Modern Central Europe Revealed". Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "How the spy John Peyton put Poland on the map (to keep King James on the throne)". British Library. 2015-05-29. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- Cybulskie, Danièle (2018-06-04). "Six Degrees of Chaucer: How Southwark Shaped The Canterbury Tales". Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- "#BBCtrending: The 500-year-old poem that captivated Reddit". BBC News. 2014-10-08. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- Stewart, Ellen (2015). "Here's what the English language sounded like 500 years ago". The Independent. Retrieved 2018-09-22.