Wes Folkerth

Shakespeares fools, clowns, changelings and the cultures of early modern intellectual disability; Shakespeares critical, social, theatrical and cinematic history; sound in literature; early modern literature and popular culture; history and poetics of pop music; neurodiversity in literature and in the university.
My current research focuses on disability, especially intellectual disability, in literature, and especially in Shakespeare. California transplant. Hoosier by birth. Stories matter: you find them everywhere and they are way more powerful than you thought. Randomness: in 2016 I was session guitarist on a gospel album produced by Celine Dions drummer.
My current research combines Disability Studies and Shakespeare Studies specifically, representations of neurodiversity and intellectual disability on the earlymodern stage, with a focus onnatural and artificial fools, changelings, rustics and clowns, the insane, andmelancholic.
M.A., Ph.D. (McGill)
B.A. (Cal State University, Chico)
Books
(Routledge, 2002) reviewed by Tanya Pollard in Shakespeare Newsletter 53 (2003-4); by Helen Moore in the TLS (15 August 2003); by Barbara Hodgdon in Studies in English Literature 43.2 (Spring 2003); by Ralph Berry in Contemporary Review 282 (2003); by Bruce R. Smith in Shakespeare Quarterly 54 (2003); by Matthew Steggle in Renaissance Forum 6.2 (2003); and by Sabine Sch羹lting in Shakespeare Jahrbuch 140 (2004).
Edited Volumes
Co-editor with Leslie Dunn of Shakespearean Hearing, Special Issue of The Upstart Crow: A Shakespeare Journal. (29): 2010.
Articles and Book Chapters
"Reading Shakespeare After Neurodiversity," in Performing Disability in Early Modern England, ed. Leslie Dunn. Palgrave/MacMillan, 2020: 141-57.
Shakespeare and Audio Recording. The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare. Vol. 2 The Worlds Shakespeare, 1660-Present. Ed. Bruce R. Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2016. 1926-30.
Goodfellows: Hockey, Shakespeare, and Indigenous Spirits in Tomson Highways Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing. In Canadian Shakespeare, ed. Susan Knutson. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 2010. 199-206.
Pietro Aretino, Thomas Nashe, and Early Modern Rhetorics of Public Address, in Making Publics in Early Modern Europe: People Things, Forms of Knowledge, eds Bronwen Wilson and Paul Yachnin. New York: Routledge, 2009. 68-80.
Shakespeare in Popular Music. Section of multivolume work Shakespeares After Shakespeare: An Encyclopedia of the Bard in Mass Media and Popular Culture. Gen. Ed. Richard Burt. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 2006. 366-407.
Tempaurality in Twelfth Night. In Aural Cultures, editor Jim Drobnick. YYZ Books, 2004. 120-26.
The Metamorphosis of Daphnis: The Case for Richard Barnfields Orpheus. In The Affectionate Shepherd: Celebrating Richard Barnfield. Eds. George Klawitter and Ken Borris. Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania: Susquehanna UP, 2001. 30531.
Roll Over Shakespeare: Bardolatry Meets Beatlemania in the Spring of 1964. Journal of Popular Culture 23.4 (winter) 2000: 75-80.
Reviews and Public Scholarship
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Louis Dudek Award for Teaching Excellence, 51勛圖厙Department of English, 2003
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Prix dExcellence de lAcad矇mie des Grands Montr矇alais, 2000
Shakespeare Studies, Early Modern Literature (drama, poetry, prose writing). Close readers and unconventional thinkers of all kinds most welcome.
It was a long time ago.