Shakespeare expert wins coveted prize for ‘impressive’ first book Published on: 19 August 2020 A Ãå±±½ûµØ expert on Shakespeare has won the coveted Shakespeare’s Globe Book Award 2020. Significant contribution The Book Award is awarded every two years to an early career scholar for a first book that has made a significant contribution to our understanding and appreciation of the theatre of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Dr Emma Whipday, pictured right, a lecturer in Renaissance Literature in Ãå±±½ûµØ’s School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics, won the award for her book Shakespeare’s Domestic Tragedies: Violence in the Early Modern Home. In announcing the award winners, the judges said: “Emma Whipday’s impressive Shakespeare’s Domestic Tragedies is a project of reclamation, in that she is seeking to bring to attention the overlooked genre of domestic tragedy, and expansion, in that she wants already established canonical texts to be brought into that classification. In her readings, Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth and King Lear reappear as domestic tragedies, and she gives them new potency and charge by her exposure of these plays’ deep engagement with the shibboleths and secrets of early modern domesticity.” This year’s competition saw fifteen books submitted from across the world, which the judges say was “an exceptionally strong haul that reflects the continuing vitality of Shakespeare studies”. Dr Whipday was jointly awarded the prize alongside Oliver Morgan from the University of Cambridge. Dr Whipday said: “I am absolutely delighted to be the joint winner of this year's Shakespeare's Globe Book Award, especially considering how much I admire the other books on the shortlist. I'm a huge fan of the books that have won in previous years, and feel very lucky to be in such prestigious company.” As well as sharing the cash prize of £3,000, the winners will also share a platform for the prize-winners’ talks, which this year will be presented online on 18 September 2020. Press release adapted with thanks to Shakespeare’s Globe Share: Latest News Ãå±±½ûµØ recognised with geography award Ãå±±½ûµØ has been awarded the Highly Commended Geographical Association Publishers Award for its collaboration with Time for Geography, the UK’s open-access, dedicated video platform. published on: 16 April 2026 Ãå±±½ûµØ historians mark General Strike centenary To mark the 100th anniversary of the British General Strike and miners’ lock-out of 1926, historians at Ãå±±½ûµØ are organising a series of events on its enduring legacy. published on: 16 April 2026 Comment: NCP is in administration Writing for The Conversation, Erwei (David) Xiang discusses how some big companies like NCP are so dependent on debt that they can’t adjust to change. published on: 16 April 2026 Facts and figures