Search for people, departments, or email addresses.

« Back To Search Results

  Sean Keilen

Sean Keilen

Professor of Literature

831-459-2322

 

Humanities Division

Literature Department
Cowell College
Porter College

Professor of Literature
Chair, Council of Provosts (2022- )
Interim Provost, Porter College (2022-24)

Faculty

Department of Performance, Play & Design (PPD)

Regular Faculty

Humanities Building 1
629

By appointment. Please contact Leah Browne (9-2564, lbrowne@ucsc.edu)

Humanities Academic Services

Williams College (BA), Cambridge University (BA, MA), Stanford University (MA, PhD)

 

Sean Keilen teaches Shakespeare's works at UC Santa Cruz, where he is Professor of Literature, Director of Shakespeare Workshop, and Chair of the Council of Provosts. He graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Williams College, with degrees in English and Classics, and was the Valedictorian of his class. His senior thesis about the influence of Ovid and Virgil on The Divine Comedy won The Dante Prize from The Dante Society of America. He completed a second B.A. in English Literature at Emmanuel College, Cambridge as a Herchel Smith Fellow. A thesis about Samuel Johnson's biography of Jonathan Swift that he wrote there won The Cambridge Quarterly Prize. Before joining the faculty at UC Santa Cruz, where he won the Committee on Teaching's Excellence in Teaching Award, Professor Keilen taught at the College of William and Mary, Princeton, and the University of Pennsylvania. His research has been supported by the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Humanities Center, the Folger Shakespeare Library, and the Huntington Library and resulted in published essays about Shakespeare, Jonson, Milton, early Renaissance drama, Ovid, the idea of the classic, friendship, and classroom pedagogy, along with a book: Vulgar Eloquence: On the Renaissance Invention of English Literature with Yale in 2006. Professor Keilen's other books include a number of edited collections: Shakespeare: The Critical Complex (Garland 1999), with Stephen Orgel; The Forms of Renaissance Thought: New Essays in Literature and Culture (Palgrave 2009), with Leonard Barkan and Bradin Cormack; and The Routledge Research Companion to Shakespeare and Classical Literature (Routledge 2017), with Nick Moschovakis. He recently completed a new book, "Shakespeare’s Scholars: Three Lessons from the Liberal Arts". Professor Keilen works closely with Santa Cruz Shakespeare, a professional theater company in Northern California, and with Julia Reinhard Lupton and UC Irvine's New Swan Shakespeare Center, on a range of programs that make Shakespeare's works and humanistic inquiry available to a diverse public.

 

READ SHAKESPEARE, LIVE PLEASANT, STAY GREEN

 

Shakespeare, classics, history and theory of literary criticism, liberal education, humanities in the public sphere, analog humanities

Shakespeare is the happy hunting ground of all minds that have lost their balance.

--  James Joyce, Ulysses (1922)

 

...it seems sometimes as if we were about to say, or had in some previous existence already said, what Shakespeare is actually now saying.

-- Virginia Woolf, "How Should One Read a Book?" (1926)

At school you are engaged not so much in acquiring knowledge as in making mental efforts under criticism.  A certain amount of knowledge you can indeed with average faculties acquire so as to retain; nor need you regret the hours you spent on much that is forgotten, for the shadow of lost knowledge at least protects you from many illusions. But you go to a great school not so much for knowledge as for arts and habits; for the habit of attention, for the art of expression, for the art of assuming at a moment's notice a new intellectual position, for the art of entering quickly into another person's thoughts, for the habit of submitting to censure and refutation, for the art of indicating assent or dissent in graduated terms, for the habit of regarding minute points of accuracy, for the art of working out what is possible in a given time, for taste, for discrimination, for mental courage, and for mental soberness.

-- William Johnson (later Cory), Eton Reform II (1861)

 

Reading can teach us something, and it is endless, about reading, about meeting with art.

-- Eudora Welty, "Henry Green: Novelist of the Imagination" (1961)

If you have the proper permissions, you can edit this entry

This campus directory is the property of the University of California at Santa Cruz. To protect the privacy of individuals listed herein, in accordance with the State of California Information Practices Act, this directory may not be used, rented, distributed, or sold for commercial purposes. For more details, please see the university guidelines for assuring privacy of personal information in mailing lists and telephone directories. If you have any questions please contact the ITS Support Center.