HUMAN HISTORIAN
I'm an historian who puts on plays. Or a playwright who studies history. The two jobs are inseparable and have a powerful synergy!
That's why I launched Human Historian, a theatre company which builds collaborations between theatre makers and history makers.
That's why I launched Human Historian, a theatre company which builds collaborations between theatre makers and history makers.
The key aims of Human Historian:
- enable healthier forms of debate
- present nuanced arguments and different viewpoints side by side
- support interdisciplinary research and collaboration
Publishing a great new piece of research this year? Go for impact. Let's publicise your work a special way!
Click on RESEARCH OUT LOUD to have your research performed. (Available for any academic discipline.)
HISTORY, THEATRE, AND POWER
The way we craft history is hugely powerful. Moreover, theatre is a hugely powerful vehicle for change, and one of the most collaborative art forms we have. So this is a call out to historians and theatre practitioners to join forces: let's reveal the past together, to help communities in the present and future.
If you are an historian, a theatre practitioner, a university researcher (any field), build a collaboration with Human Historian: CONTACT
On the relationship between theatre and power, take a look at my monograph uncovering the world of Oxford and Cambridge during the time of Shakespeare:
Elizabeth Sandis, Early Modern Drama at the Universities: Institutions, Intertexts, Individuals (Oxford University Press, 2022)
To read about Robe Rebellion on Shakespeare's birthday, click here
HISTORY, THEATRE, AND POWER
The way we craft history is hugely powerful. Moreover, theatre is a hugely powerful vehicle for change, and one of the most collaborative art forms we have. So this is a call out to historians and theatre practitioners to join forces: let's reveal the past together, to help communities in the present and future.
If you are an historian, a theatre practitioner, a university researcher (any field), build a collaboration with Human Historian: CONTACT
On the relationship between theatre and power, take a look at my monograph uncovering the world of Oxford and Cambridge during the time of Shakespeare:
Elizabeth Sandis, Early Modern Drama at the Universities: Institutions, Intertexts, Individuals (Oxford University Press, 2022)
To read about Robe Rebellion on Shakespeare's birthday, click here


