Andrew Wallace
Professor
- B.A. Honours Trinity College, University of Toronto; M.A. and Ph.D., University of Toronto
- Email Andrew Wallace
Research Interests
- Renaissance literature (especially Spenser and Milton)
- The classical tradition (especially Greek tragedy, Virgil, Ovid, Seneca, and the reception and reinvention of classical texts and culture during the Middle Ages and Renaissance)
- Medieval literature (especially Dante and Chaucer)
- Relations between classical philology and modern philosophy
Current Research

My first monograph, Virgil鈥檚 Schoolboys: The Poetics of Pedagogy in Renaissance England (Oxford University Press, 2010), studies the ties that bind schoolmasters and schoolboys to the poems upon which they exercised their attentions in the grammar schools of Renaissance England. The book advances three central claims: that schoolmasters and commentators repeatedly confront the possibility that Virgil is always-already a serious theorist of the elusive exchanges we call instruction; that the interpretations these authorities cast as discoveries about the inner workings of Virgil鈥檚 poems are underwritten by humanist pedagogy鈥檚 fascination with the iconographic power of the physical presence of the master at the proving ground of his lessons; and that Virgil鈥檚 pedagogical afterlife testifies to the ways in which the day-to-day business of the grammar schools fostered in schoolboys a simultaneously timorous and eager relation to texts, interpretation, masters, and indeed to the concept of mastery itself.

My second monograph, The Presence of Rome in Medieval and Early Modern Britain: Texts, Artefacts and Beliefs (Cambridge University Press, 2020), studies the cultural and intellectual stakes of Medieval and Renaissance Britain鈥檚 sense of itself as forever living under the shadow of Rome鈥搕hat is, as living under the shadow of a city whose name could serve as shorthand for the ancient, fallen, quintessentially human power that had once conquered and colonized Britain, and also for the alternately sanctified and demonized edifice of the Roman Church. The book argues that the 鈥渇act鈥 of Rome insinuates itself not just into arts of rhetoric, rules of reason, or conceptions of nationhood and Christian discipline, but into the thinking individual鈥檚 relation to the self, and into the processes by which men and women make themselves at home in what the philosopher Stanley Cavell calls 鈥渢he ordinary.鈥
I am currently writing a monograph on the subject of the loss and rediscovery of ancient Greek and Roman tragic texts, with special attention to sudden, unexpected dialogues between philology and philosophy.
Monographs
. Oxford University Press. 2010.
Cambridge University Press. 2020.
Co-Edited Volume
,聽ed.聽Donald Beecher, Travis DeCook, Andrew Wallace, and Grant Williams聽聽(University of Toronto Press, 2015).
Refereed Essays and Book Chapters
鈥溾澛John Donne in Context, ed. Michael Schoenfeldt (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019), 131-138.
鈥溾澛Edmund Spenser in Context, ed. Michael Schoenfeldt (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 7-13.
鈥溾澛Spenser Studies聽30 (2016): 255-270.
鈥溾澛Ars Reminiscendi: Mind and Memory in Renaissance Culture, ed. Donald Beecher and Grant Williams (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009), 231-243.
鈥溾澛Spenser Studies聽22 (2007): 153-170.
鈥溾澛The Journal of English Literary History聽(ELH), 73 (2006): 161-185.
鈥淩eading the 1590 Faerie Queene with Thomas Nashe.鈥 Studies in the Literary Imagination 38.2 (2005): 35-49.
鈥溾澛Spenser Studies聽19 (2004): 65-92.
鈥溾 Renaissance Quarterly 56 (2003): 377-407.
Forthcoming Essays and Book Chapters
鈥淧oetry and Pedagogy: Lyric Voices and the Grammar of the Self,鈥 Oxford Handbook of Renaissance Poetry, ed. Jason Scott-Warren and Andrew Zurcher. Expected publication date is Fall 2020.
Conference Presentations
鈥淭he Afterlives of Roman Britain.鈥 Early Modern Rome 3, Rome, October 2017.
鈥淎ffect, Allegory, and the Elizabethan Schoolroom.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Berlin, March, 2015.
鈥淲hat do the Living Want from the Dead? Spenser and the Human Figure.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, San Diego, March, 2013.
鈥淓dmund Spenser and the Fact of Rome.鈥 MLA Annual Convention, Boston, January 2013.
鈥淛ohn Milton and the Fact of Rome.鈥 Canada Milton Seminar, Victoria College, Toronto, April 2012.
鈥淓ngland鈥檚 Grammar Schools and the Spectre of Rome.鈥 MLA Annual Convention, Seattle, January 2012.
鈥淎fter Rome.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Montreal, March 2011.
鈥淐alling it Tragedy.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Venice, April 2010.
鈥淲hat Does The Faerie Queene Want? Virgil, Spenser, and the Elizabethan Grammar School.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Los Angeles, March 2009.
鈥溾榃hat鈥檚 Hecuba to him?鈥: Pain, Privacy, and the Ancient Text.鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Miami, April 2007.
鈥淓veryone Knows What Happened at Troy.鈥 MLA Annual Convention, Philadelphia, December 2006.
鈥淔orgetting Epic in Early Modern England,鈥 鈥淎rs Reminiscendi : Mind and Memory in Renaissance Culture,鈥 杏吧原创 University, June 2006.
鈥淓.K and his Discontents: The Critical Moment in Early Modern England,鈥 Fourth International Spenser Society Conference,鈥 Toronto, May 2006.
鈥淧astoral and the Painful Schoolmaster,鈥 ACCUTE, London, Ontario, May 2005.
鈥淰irgil鈥檚 Schooldays: Culture and Translation in the Early Modern Schoolroom,鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Cambridge, England, April 2005.
鈥溾楴oursled up in life and manners wilde鈥: Practicing Instruction in The Faerie Queene,鈥 Renaissance Society of America, New York, New York, May 2004.
鈥淭ext and Paratext in the 1590 Faerie Queene: Reading the Dedicatory Sonnets as Gloriana鈥檚 Feast,鈥 International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan, May 2003.
鈥淲hat is Georgic?: The Poet鈥檚 Labours and the Georgic Metaphor in The Faerie Queene (1590),鈥 Renaissance Society of America, Tempe, Arizona, April 2002.
鈥淣abokov鈥檚 Metamorphoses: Translation and Transformation in Ada,鈥 Nabokov Centennial Panel II. MLA Annual Convention, Chicago, December 1999.
Recent Graduate Courses
ENGL 5303鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淎llegory and the Ordinary: Spenser鈥檚 Faerie Queene and Wittgenstein鈥檚 Philosophical Investigations鈥
ENGL 5308鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淎fter Rome: Medieval and Renaissance Perspectives on Roman Britain鈥
ENGL 5308鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淭ragedy!鈥
ENGL 5308鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淭he Afterlife of the Ancients: Classical Culture and the Origins of Modernity鈥
ENGL 5308鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淛ohn Milton鈥檚 Poetry and Prose鈥
ENGL 5308鈥擱enaissance Studies: 鈥淩enaissance Literature and the Renaissance Schoolroom鈥
Ph.D. Dissertation Committees
Hisham Al Khatib. Dissertation on Renaissance literature. In progress.
Amal El-Mohtar. Dissertation on 19th-century literature
Danielle Taylor. Dissertation on Medieval literature. In progress.
Alexander Grammatikos. Dissertation on British Romanticism and Nineteenth-Century Greece. Complete.