David McInnis
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dnmcinnis.bsky.social
David McInnis
@dnmcinnis.bsky.social

Professor of Shakespeare & Early Modern Drama (Melbourne) | Editor, Shakespeare Quarterly (with Vanessa I. Corredera & Arthur L. Little, Jr) | Lost plays | Editing Behn, Shakespeare, & Marlowe.

David McInnis may refer to:David Lee McInnis, American actor David Fairly McInnis (1934–2025), American politician in South Carolina

Source: Wikipedia
Art 35%
History 25%

10/10, no notes from this Shakespearean

In passport line in Aotearoa NZ:

Agent: why are you here?

Me: a conference on editing Shakespeare

Agent: ok, you can enter—just don’t change any of his words
In passport line in Prague remembering my best experience in US:

Agent: why are you here?

I’m a Professor, giving a talk.

What’s you subject?

Political Philosophy.

My favourite!!

Really??

No. I say that to all the Professors.

Reposted by David McInnis

In passport line in Prague remembering my best experience in US:

Agent: why are you here?

I’m a Professor, giving a talk.

What’s you subject?

Political Philosophy.

My favourite!!

Really??

No. I say that to all the Professors.

Oh ye shades of Keats and Shelley, are we come to this? 😉
Today, a friend involved in the Esna restoration project has shared with me his latest stunning photos of the restored ceiling and columns of the Temple of Khnum in Esna, Upper #Egypt. During a multi-year restoration project, the dirt and soot that had obscured the ...🧵1/3

📷 D. v. Recklinghausen
🏺
‘Study after study shows that students want to develop these critical thinking skills, are not lazy, and large numbers of them would be in favor of banning ChatGPT and similar tools in universities’, says @olivia.science www.ru.nl/en/research/...
‘Opposing the inevitability of AI at universities is possible and necessary’ | Radboud University
Since the widespread release of ChatGPT in December of 2022, AI has taken over much of the world by storm – including academia. Most of this happened with very little pushback, despite a myriad of iss...
www.ru.nl

Reposted by David McInnis

‘If the violent, sexually transgressive, atheistical and generally self-destructive Marlowe had had a motto, then “What nourishes me destroys me” would have been more than appropriate.’

M.W. Rowe evaluates new evidence concerning the playwright’s only known portrait.

www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2025/oc...
M.W. Rowe | But is it Marlowe?
In late 1952, builders working in the Old Court of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, removed two boards from under an...
www.lrb.co.uk

Reposted by David McInnis

Today on the blog: a magnificent find by @franceswolfreston.bsky.social of a book that the poet Katherine Philips gave to Mary Jeffreys; a discussion with important scholarly implications for the study of Philips earlymodernfemalebookownership.wordpress.com/2025/10/27/h... #EarlyModern #HerBook

Interesting side note — the ‘Romeo Problem’: ‘Romeo mistakenly thought the unconscious Juliet was dead and abandoned hope, with tragic consequences. By analogy, if a species is mistakenly declared extinct, conservationists may give up on it.’

www.aldoleopold.org/blogs/the-ro...
The “Romeo Problem”—When to Declare a Species Extinct | The Aldo Leopold Foundation
If a species is believed to be extinct but, in fact, still survives, that could have tragic consequences that hasten the species’ eventual demise, such as no longer protecting its critical habitat.
www.aldoleopold.org

*shakes fist at Shakespeare*

‘Many people will know of shrews only courtesy of Shakespeare. … [T]he offensive term has stuck through the ages, draining sympathy for and interest in the animal.’

www.theguardian.com/environment/...
And then there were none: Australia’s only shrew declared extinct
The tally of Australian mammals extinct since 1788 is now 39 species – far more than for any other country
www.theguardian.com

Reposted by David McInnis

Reposted by David McInnis

GOOD NEWS !
"A team of musicologists has unearthed the printed score of a previously unknown Purcell song, as well as the original manuscript for various keyboard compositions."
#baroque #music
www.theguardian.com/music/2025/o...
‘Almost unheard of’: experts find more music by English composer Henry Purcell
Printed score and keyboard manuscript by Purcell, who died in 1695, unearthed in Worcestershire and Norfolk
www.theguardian.com
#earlymodern out December at last such a privilege to work with three distinguished scholars of early modern women’s writing

With the usual prudent caveats about first examples in the OED; I love that Jonson is the first to be cited for "I told you so"

Reposted by David McInnis

A massive thanks to everyone involved in #Globe4Globe 2025! We were thrilled to see 300 attendees join us for 24 hours devoted to Shakespeare & environmental justice. If you missed out, most of the presentations are now available online now: www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...
Globe4Globe 2025: Shakespeare and Environmental Justice - YouTube
In 2025, Globe4Globe returned with the Shakespeare and Environmental Justice Symposium. Taking place live and online across 24 hours on September 12-13 2025,...
www.youtube.com
Six internationally recognised marine scientists who are researching South Australia's toxic algal bloom are set to lose their jobs at Flinders University, the ABC understands.

www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09...
Flinders University jobs under threat as news of proposed restructure spreads
Six internationally recognised marine scientists who are researching South Australia's toxic algal bloom are set to lose their jobs at Flinders University, the ABC understands.
www.abc.net.au
1/At Macquarie Uni we are losing 50% of our units in my faculty. This is on top of cuts in 2020. We estimate by next year my faculty will be teaching 80% fewer subjects than pre Covid. Disciplines being cut do not have declining enrolments. @jennaprice.bsky.social @michaelwestbiz.bsky.social

Brilliant!!! Congratulations!! (…now sleep!)

Reposted by David McInnis

Statement of support for the Save Meanjin campaign, from colleagues in the Screen and Cultural Studies program at the University of Melbourne savemeanjin.org

We’re doing a staged reading of *Volpone* next year! 🦊

Put it in your diary, Melbourne folk!

Wednesday 18 November, 6:30pm

www.bellshakespeare.com.au/events

Reposted by David McInnis

Hello 👋

We're the official #UniMelb account!

Follow us for news, updates and information about UniMelb. For now, enjoy the blue skies over our Parkville campus 💙

That was a particularly great session

Listening in to this now -- such inspiring papers...!
Up next at #Globe4Globe 2025: Animal Justice!

Karen Raber - Resisting Tyranny: Shakespeare’s Animals

Gigi Pinwill - Shakespeare’s Animals: An Actor Prepares

Barbara Taylor - They Howled All Together: Imagining Predators with Shakespeare

#G4G2025

Reposted by David McInnis

Up next at #Globe4Globe 2025: Animal Justice!

Karen Raber - Resisting Tyranny: Shakespeare’s Animals

Gigi Pinwill - Shakespeare’s Animals: An Actor Prepares

Barbara Taylor - They Howled All Together: Imagining Predators with Shakespeare

#G4G2025

The University of Melbourne English and Theatre Studies Statement on the closure of Meanjin.

12 September 2025
Re #MeanjinJournal, a letter from myself and some of my colleagues to The University of Melbourne. #Meanjin is such an important part of Australia's literary ecosystem and losing it would be culturally and industrially devastating. #AusLit #AustralianWriters #Publishing #Unimelb

@quaritch1847.bsky.social's new catalogue of annotated books might just be the greatest bookseller's catalogue of all time. Just sayin'.

Take a moment to appreciate the fun they clearly had:
www.quaritch.com/wp-content/u...

What conversations are we having or should we be having, in Shakespeare studies? Authors are invited to submit articles for publication in the first issue of the SQ under the new editorial leadership, with a focus on the Twenty-First century and Shakespeare.
3 Oct 25
academic.oup.com/sq/pages/cal...

“Two things could and should be done to restore Marlowe to his rightful place. The first, obviously and simply, is to study and produce his plays more.”

www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
The Guardian view on Christopher Marlowe: it’s time to read him and honour him | Editorial
Editorial: England’s second most famous playwright is the star of a new play. But his own works should be staged more, and he should be commemorated better
www.theguardian.com