Jennie MacDonald

Writer and Photographer

Conferences/Presentations

  • Presenter: “‘The Most Artistic Thing’: Framing the Theatre in Miniature.” Picturing the Stage II (Theatre and Performance Studies Caucus). 50th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. Denver, Colorado: March 21-23, 2019.
  • Presenter: “‘The Comical Hotch-Potch, or the Alphabet turn’d Posture Master’: A Fluid Text Reading.” Conference: The Beauty of Letters: Text, Type and Communication in the Eighteenth Century. University of Birmingham, England: March 14–15, 2015.
  • Panelist: “The Intertextuality of James M. Cain’s Snyder-Gray Novels: The Postman always Rings TwiceDouble Indemnity, and The Waitress.” Literary Studies Roundtable. University of Denver, Denver, CO: May 31, 2013.
  • Panelist: “‘The likeness of a living form’: The Role of Correspondence in Robert Jephson’s The Count of Narbonne” (revised, with AV images). Literary Studies Roundtable. University of Denver, Denver, CO: May 11, 2012.
  • Presenter: “Spectralizing the Text: From The Castle of Otranto to The Count of Narbonne.” 41st Annual Conference of the British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. Oxford, England: January 4–6, 2012.
  • Presenter: “‘The likeness of a living form’: The Role of Correspondence in Robert Jephson’s The Count of Narbonne.” 43rd Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. San Antonio, Texas: March 22–24, 2012.
  • Panelist: “Reading / Reciting Eighteenth-Century Verse: Robert Jephson’s Prologue to The Count of Narbonne.” 43rd Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. San Antonio, Texas: March 22–24, 2012.
  • Presenter: “Every One Has His Fault: Reading and Revising Elizabeth Inchbald’s London in Postcolonial America.” 41st Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. Albuquerque, New Mexico: March 17-–20, 2010.
  • Presenter: “Reviving Casements: The Windows of Udolpho.” 39th Annual Conference of the British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. Oxford, England: January 5–7, 2010.