Sebastian Sobecki
Sebastian Sobecki is Professor of later medieval literature in the Department of English and the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. His research and teaching extend to a wide area of late medieval and early modern literature, with a focus on ideas of the self, life writing, law, travel, and authorship in the literary history of the long fifteenth century. He is particularly interested in Chaucer, Hoccleve, Kempe, Lydgate, Skelton, and Hakluyt. Manuscripts and palaeography are central to his practice. He has produced two volumes for the Oxford edition of Richard Hakluyt’s Principal Navigations, 1598-1600 (forthcoming), and he is completing the edited volume The Cambridge Guide to Global Medieval Travel Writing (Cambridge UP). Ongoing editorial projects include The Cambridge History of London Literature: Vol. 1, The Beginnings to 1666 (Cambridge UP), with Stephanie Elsky, and, with Emily Steiner, The Oxford Handbook of Middle English Prose (Oxford UP). In addition to writing The Marvels of John Mandeville (Reaktion Books), completing the monograph The Invention of Colonialism: Richard Hakluyt and Medieval Travel Writing (Cambridge UP), and co-writing a book on Christine de Pizan with Misty Schieberle and Elizaveta Strakhov (The Mother of English Literature, Cambridge UP) he is working on two book-length studies, on Chaucer and authorial intention in fifteenth-century literature and on the handwriting and literary culture of London's bureaucratic clerks. His board memberships include The Journal of the Early Book Society, the Index of Middle English Prose, Maritime Humanities 1400-1800 (Routledge), and Texts and Transitions: Studies in the History of Manuscripts and Printed Books (Brepols). He is a former trustee of the Hakluyt Society and edited the journal Studies in the Age of Chaucer from 2018 until 2023. He currently serves as a trustee of the New Chaucer Society.
People Type:
- Late Medieval and Early Modern English Literature
- Authorship and Literary History
- Law and Politics
- Travel Writing and Global Medieval Literature
- Palaeography, Archives, and Manuscripts