Shankar Raman
Professor
sram@mit.edu
617-253-8873
Faculty Research
Aesthetics | Colonialism and Postcolonialism | Critical Theory | Cultural History | Drama and Performance | History of Ideas | History of Science | Literary Theory | Literature and Philosophy | Literature and Science | Marxism | Psychoanalysis | Renaissance and Early Modern Literature | Shakespeare Studies | Travel Literature | Visual Culture and Iconography
Shankar Raman is a Professor of the Literature Section. His research focuses on late medieval and early modern literature and culture. He received his PhD in English Literature (with a minor in German) from Stanford University in 1995, switching fields and careers after receiving both a master’s (U. C. Berkeley) and a bachelor’s (MIT) degree in Electrical Engineering (along with a second bachelor’s at MIT through the Department of Architecture).
His first book, Framing ‘India’: The Colonial Imaginary in Early Modern Culture (Stanford 2002), investigates the relationship between colonialism and literature in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. It compares Portuguese, English and Dutch colonial activity to examine the role of India as a figure through which these diverse European powers imagined and defined themselves. A second book, Renaissance Literature and Postcolonial Studies, was recently published by Edinburgh University Press (2011) . He is also co-editor, with Lowell Gallagher, of Knowing Shakespeare: Senses, Embodiment, Cognition (Palgrave Macmillan 2010). He is currently working on a monograph on the relationship between literature and mathematics in early modern Europe, tentatively entitled Before the Two Cultures. From 2005 to 2010 he participated in Making Publics: Media, Markets and Associations in Early Modern Europe, 1500 – 1700 [MaPs], a major five-year interdisciplinary research initiative funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada.
His teaching at MIT includes: Shakespeare, Renaissance poetry and drama, literary theory, and postcolonial fiction.
Books
In Progress |
Before the Two Cultures: Literature and Mathematics in Early Modern Europe. |
2011 |
Renaissance Literature and Postcolonial Studies. Edinburgh University Press. |
2010 |
Knowing Shakespeare: Senses, Embodiment Cognition. Palgrave Macmillan. (A collection of essays, co-edited with Lowell Gallagher, UCLA). |
2002 |
Framing “India”: The Colonial Imaginary in Early Modern Culture. Stanford University Press. |
Selected Articles
2011 | “Learning from de Bry: Lessons in Seeing and Writing the Heathen,” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 41 (1): 13-66. |
2010 | “Specifying Unknown Things: The Algebra of The Merchant of Venice,” in Paul Yachnin and Bronwen Wilson, eds., Making Publics in Early Modern Europe: People, Places, Forms of Knowledge. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 212-231. |
2009 | “Death by Numbers: Counting and Accounting in The Winter’s Tale,” in Diana Henderson, ed., Alternative Shakespeares 3. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 146-171. |
2007 | “Marvell’s Now,” Early Modern Culture (6), Special Issue: Timely Meditations (eds. Crystal Bartolovich and Jonathan Gil Harris); http://emc.eserver.org/1-6/raman.html |
2005 | “Marking Time: Memory and Market in Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors,” Shakespeare Quarterly 56 (2): 176-205. |
2004 | “‘The Ship Comes Well-Laden’: Court Politics, Colonialism, and Cuckoldry in Gil Vicente’s Auto da India.” In: Imperialisms: Historical and Literary Investigations 1500-1900, ed. Balachandran Rajan and Elizabeth Sauer. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 15-32. |
2001 | “Can’t Buy Me Love: Money, Gender, and Colonialism in Donne’s Erotic Verse.” Criticism 43(2): 135-168. |
2001 | “Back to the Future: Forging History in Luis de Camões’ Os Lusíadas,” in Travel Knowledge: European “Discoveries” in the Early Modern Period, ed. Ivo Kamps and Jyotsna G. Singh,.New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 127-147. |
1997 | “Imaginary Islands: Staging the East.” Renaissance Drama, n.s., Vol. XXVI: 131-162. |
1997 | “Desire and Violence in Renaissance England: Christopher Marlowe’s Edward II.” Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift, 71(1): 39-69. |
Subjects taught in recent years: