Publications | Suzannah Lipscomb

Publications

Books

A Visitor’s Companion to Tudor England (London: Ebury, March 2012)

Henry VIII and the Court: Art, Politics and Performance, editor with Thomas Betteridge (Ashgate, under contract for publication in 2012)

1536: The Year that Changed Henry VIII (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2009)

Henry VIII: 500 Facts with Brett Dolman, Lee Prosser, David Souden and Lucy Worsley (Historic Royal Palaces, 2009)

Chapters in books

‘The fall of Anne Boleyn: a crisis in gender relations at the Tudor court?’ in Henry VIII and the Tudor Court ed. Suzannah Lipscomb and Thomas Betteridge (Ashgate, forthcoming 2012)

‘Refractory women: the limits of power in the French Reformed church’ in Dire l’interdit: The Vocabulary of Censure and Exclusion in the Early Modern Reformed Tradition ed. Raymond A. Mentzer, Philippe Chareyre and Françoise Moreil (Brill, Series in Church History, 2010), pp. 13-28

Journal articles

‘Crossing boundaries: women’s gossip and violence in sixteenth-century France’, French History 25.4 (December 2011)

‘Historical authenticity and interpretative strategy at Hampton Court Palace’, The Public Historian: ‘Public History and Professional Practice in the United Kingdom 32.3 (August 2010), 98-119

‘Subjection and companionship: the French Reformed marriage’, Reformation and Renaissance Review 6.3 (2004), 349-360

Magazine articles

‘All the King’s fools’, History Today (August 2011)

‘Home sweet home’, Calliope (January, 2011)

‘How to paint a monarch’, Wunderkammer Magazine (April, 2010)

‘Henry’s big year’, Reform Magazine (October 2009)

‘Henry’s pleasure palace’, Essence Magazine (July/August 2009)

‘Who was Henry VIII and what went wrong?’, History Today (April 2009)

‘Henry VIII at Hampton Court Palace in 1509 and 2009’, with Tom Betteridge, History Today (January 2009)

Review articles

Review of Mary Boleyn: ‘The Great and Infamous Whore’ by Alison Weir, BBC History Magazine (November 2011)

Review of Anne Boleyn: Fatal Attractions by G.W. Bernard, Renaissance Quarterly 64.1 (Spring 2011)

Review of Courtiers: The Secret History of Kensington Palace by Lucy Worsley, History Today (January 2011)

Review of Plenti and Grase: Food and Drink in a Sixteenth-Century Household by Mark Dawson, History Today (April 2010)

Review of The English Marriage: Tales of Love, Money and Adultery by Maureen Waller, The Sunday Telegraph (November 2009)

Review of The Last Office: 1539 and the Dissolution of Monastery by Geoffrey Moorhouse, History Today (July 2008)

Review of Exploring Emotional History: Gender, Mentality and Literature in the Indian Awakening by Rajat Kanta Ray, The Telegraph (Calcutta, February 2002)

Online

Editor of All About Henry VIII – a series of essays by scholars including Prof. Peter Marshall, Dr Steven Gunn, Dr Richard Rex, Dr Thomas S. Freeman and Dr Maria Hayward.

http://www.hrp.org.uk/HamptonCourtPalace/stories/palacehighlights/AlivingTudorworld/AllaboutHenryVIII.aspx

Selected conference and seminar papers

‘Natural fools and learning disability at the early Tudor court’, All the King’s Fools Wellcome Trust Symposium (Hampton Court Palace, October 2011)

‘Crossing boundaries: women’s gossip and violence in sixteenth-century France’, Conference to honour Robin Briggs (Oxford, May 2010)

‘The fall of Anne Boleyn: a crisis in gender relations at the Tudor court?’, Renaissance Society of America (Venice, April 2010). Also given at Henry VIII and the Tudor Court, 1509-2009 (Hampton Court Palace, July 2009).

‘Heritage and public history: Henry VIII in 2009’, Filming and Performing Renaissance History: Temporalities and Materialities Symposium (Belfast, April 2009)

Roundtables on ‘New directions in consistorial studies’, ‘Shekhar Kapur’s Elizabeth I films: how should scholars respond?’ and ‘Henry VIII: the creation of the royal image’, Sixteenth Century Society Conference (St Louis, October 2008)

‘Historical honesty in historic houses’, Public History Conference (Liverpool, April 2008)

‘Implementing patriarchy: late sixteenth century women and the French consistory’, Gender, Culture and Society seminar (History Faculty, Oxford, May 2006)

‘Maid and mistress: being a servant in sixteenth-century Protestant France’, Early Modern European History Research seminar (All Souls College, Oxford, October 2005)

‘’Rolling in the hay’: sin, women and the family in the French consistorial registers’, Sixteenth Century Society Conference (Toronto, October 2004)

Unpublished doctoral thesis

‘Maids, wives and mistresses: Disciplined women in Reformation Languedoc’ (University of Oxford, 2009)

Comments are closed.