Claire Jowitt

British academic
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish academic
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
isCritic Literary critic
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Female
The details

Biography

Claire Elaine Jowitt is an English academic who writes on race, cross-gender, piracy, identity, empire and performance. She currently is a Professor in English and History within the Schools of History and Literature, Drama and Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. Previously, she held a personal chair in English at Southampton University (2012-2015), was Professor of Renaissance English Literature at Nottingham Trent University (2005–12) and Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at Aberystwyth University (1996–2005).

Research

Her work on the representation of outsiders such as Jews, Turks and pirates in Renaissance literature and culture has cast light on the complex and contradictory nature of contemporary attitudes to "others". She argues that allegorical allusions to domestic English political issues are important as well as the dominant view that literary representations played an important role in the shaping of a national consciousness. Her examination of two early modern English "Turk" plays, Lust's Dominion and The Turke, notes the insight they provide to the domestic concerns of the culture they were produced within, including their negative depiction of Islamic men and their contribution to contemporary anti-Muslim sentiment.

Likewise, in her analysis of the development of the pirate romance in the late-16th and early-17th centuries, Jowitt notes the ambivalence of attitudes to the ideology and practice of piracy — maritime violence — in an England that was becoming known internationally as a "nation of pirates". She describes how the portrayal of piracy in the contemporary literature became an index for other domestic concerns. She suggests that the depiction of pirates in Sir Philip Sydney's New Arcadia — in some respects acting little differently from any group of fighting men — may reflect the ambivalence of English attitudes of the time towards "men of action" like Sir Francis Drake. For the character Prince Musidorus, piracy and pirates are not condemned outright – if they can be serviceable to his cause, and are successful, then he supports them, in the same flexible way as Queen Elizabeth gave semi-official support to the "patriotic violence" of Drake and Hawkins.

Hakluyt Editorial Project

In May 2008, a major interdisciplinary conference entitled Richard Hakluyt 1552–1616: Life, Times, Legacy was convened by Jowitt and several colleagues, jointly organised by the National Maritime Museum, the Centre for Travel Writing Studies, Nottingham Trent University and the National University of Ireland, Galway. This meeting examined the significance of the works of the 16th century English writer Richard Hakluyt (1553—1616), best known for his promotion of English settlement of North America. A major aim of the conference was to bring together a network of scholars to prepare a new edition of Hakluyt's Principal Navigations, and a project was subsequently established to produce a multi-volume critical edition on this work. In parallel, Jowitt co-edited a collection of 24 essays on Richard Hakluyt that was published in 2012.

Professional recognition

From 2005–2008, Jowitt was Honorary Secretary of the Society for Renaissance Studies. In 2008, she was elected a Fellow of The English Association. In 2011, Jowitt received an Institute of Historical Research Scouloudi Historical Award for the publication of "Richard Hakluyt and Travel Writing in Early Modern Europe".

Books

  • 2002, with Watt, D., eds. The arts of seventeenth-century science: representations of the natural world in European and North American culture. Aldershot : Ashgate Press.
  • 2003. Voyage drama and gender politics 1589–1642: real and imagined worlds . Manchester : Manchester University Press.
  • 2006. Pirates? The politics of plunder, 1550–1650. Basingstoke : Palgrave.
  • 2010. The culture of piracy 1580–1630: English literature and Seaborne crime. Farnham : Ashgate Press.
  • 2012, with Carey, D., eds. Richard Hakluyt and Travel Writing in Early Modern Europe. Farnham : Ashgate Press.
  • Aune, M. G.. (2006) 'Book Review: Claire Jowitt. Voyage Drama and Gender Politics 1589–1642: Real and Imagined Worlds. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2003.'. Early Theatre 9.1: 145–8
  • TLS (2003) In Brief – Voyage Drama and Gender Politics, 1589–1642 by Claire Jowitt, Reviewed in the Times literary supplement. no. 5214,: 30
  • Brennan, Michael G.(2004) Voyage, Drama and Gender Politics 1589–1642: Real and Imagined Worlds, Reviewed by Notes and Queries, 51, no. 1 (2004): 86–87
  • Claire Jowitt, Voyage Drama and Gender Politics 1589–1642 Reviewed in Literature & history. 13, Part 2 (2004): 91
  • Laycock, Kelly (2003) Voyage Drama and Gender Politics 1589–1642: Real and Imagined Worlds by Claire Jowitt; Reviewed in Renaissance and Reformation. 27, no. 1,: 125
  • Brennan, Michael G. (2008) Pirates? The politics of plunder, 1550–1650 Claire Jowitt (ed.), Reviewed in Notes and Queries Volume 55, Issue 3, Pp.366–368.
  • Risso, P (2007) Claire Jowitt (ed.), Pirates? The Politics of Plunder, 1550–1650 – Reviewed in International Journal of Maritime History, 19, no. 2: 485
  • Merrett, Robert James (2009) Pirates? The Politics of Plunder, 1550–1650 Edited by Claire Jowitt, Reviewed in Renaissance and Reformation. 32, no. 2, (2009): 124
  • Döring, Tobias (2008) Pirates? The Politics of Plunder, 1550–1650 by Claire Jowitt Reviewed in Journal for the study of British cultures. 15, no. 1,: 80
  • http://www.history.ac.uk/fellowships/awards/scouloudi Institute of Historical Research Scouloudi Publication Award for "The Culture of Piracy 1580 – 1630: English Literature and Seaborne Crime" (Accessed March 2011)

Other publications

  • 2010, Renaissance Pirates, BBC History Magazine, July Vol 11, No. 7

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