Richard James Wood
Richard J. Wood is a specialist in Early Modern English
Literature, the author of a monograph, Sidney’s Arcadia and the
Conflicts of Virtue (Manchester University Press, 2020), on
Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia and Reformation theology, as
well as journal articles on Sidney's Arcadia in the
Sidney Journal and Early Modern Literary Studies.
He contributed essays on Sidney to two collections: Essex:
The Cultural Impact of an Elizabethan Courtier, edited by Lisa
Hopkins and Annaliese Connolly (Manchester University Press, 2013);
and Maternity and Romance Narratives in Early Modern
England, edited by Naomi Miller and Karen Bamford (Routledge,
2015).
He wrote the chapter on William Cavendish and Elizabethan Nostalgia
in A Companion to the Cavendishes: Writing, Patronage and
Material Culture, edited by Lisa Hopkins and Tom Rutter (ARC
Humanities Press, 2020).
He is the Associate Editor of Chapters VI, VII and VIII of The
Year's Work in English Studies (OUP), and the author of the
entries on Sidney and Spenser in the same publication.
He recently reviewed Charles Stanley Ross and Joel B. Davis's
Restoration in Contemporary English of the Complete 1593
Edition of The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia (Parlor Press,
2017) for the Spenser Review
(https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/49.3.18/).
He contributed the entries on Shakespeare's Venus and
Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece to The Facts on
File Companion to Shakespeare (2012) and reviews of
modern performances of Renaissance theatre to Early Modern
Literary Studies and the Internet Shakespeare
Editions Performance Chronicle.