Interviews with Leading Intellectual Historians - Jamie Gianoutsos
Lectures in Intellectual History
Release Date: 09/13/2022
Lectures in Intellectual History
This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 25 September 2024.
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This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 18 September 2024.
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This lecture was delivered on 3 April 2024 at the University of St Andrews.
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This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 13 March 2024.
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This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 31 January 2024.
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This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 24 January 2024.
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This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 17 January 2024.
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This talk was given at Toppings in St Andrews on December 7, 2023.
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The barely known story of the 30-year rivalry between Francis Bacon and Edward Coke is a fascinating case study in late-Elizabethan-Jacobean court politics. But it can also be a means by which to explore the limits of historical truth, and the uses of fiction. Jesse Norman is a Visiting Research Fellow at St Andrews, a Fellow of All Souls and a Member of Parliament (UK). This lecture was given on the 17th of November 2023 at the University of St Andrews.
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This lecture was given at the University of St Andrews on 15 November 2023.
info_outlineDuring the final weeks of the summer, the Institute of Intellectual History brings a series of new interviews with leading intellectual historians about their career and work in intellectual history.
In this fifth interview, we present a conversation with Jamie Gianoutsos.
Dr Jamie Gianoutsos is Associate Professor of History at Mount St. Mary’s University in the US. In the interview, Jamie shares insights into her university experience, her motivation to become a researcher and her discovery of the intellectual history of seventeenth-century Britain as a research field. She discusses her time as a Ph.D. candidate and traces the early stages of her academic career and the work on her book The Rule of Manhood: Tyranny Gender and Classical Republicanism in England, 1603-1660 (Cambridge University Press, 2020), which won the The István Hont Book Prize 2020. For an interview with Jamie about her book, click here.