Christine Sukic
@christinesukic.bsky.social
320 followers 710 following 21 posts
Professeur de littérature anglaise à l’université de Reims Champagne Ardenne/Professor of early modern English studies at university of Reims Présidente de la Société Française Shakespeare
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Reposted by Christine Sukic
jdmccafferty.bsky.social
Isaac Oliver, c. 1565-1617.

Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia (1596-1662) when Princess Elizabeth in 1613

(Royal Collection, HM CIII)
Reposted by Christine Sukic
gettymuseum.bsky.social
These details? Stunning!
Close up on the right side of a woman's face. There is a frilled collar and delicate lace headpiece. Detail of the right arm with a lace sleeve and a gold bracelet. She is holding a handkerchief in her hand.
christinesukic.bsky.social
#otd St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre
jdmccafferty.bsky.social
24 Aug 1572: Sir Philip Sidney views St. Bartholomew's Day massacre from the #English embassy in #Paris #otd (NPG)
Reposted by Christine Sukic
peterpaulrubens.bsky.social
Born on this day in 1552, Lavinia Fontana of Bologna. Here, self-portrait in her studiolo in 1579, an intellectual young artist.
Reposted by Christine Sukic
peterpaulrubens.bsky.social
Private chamber of abbess Giovanna Piacenza at the convent of San Paolo, Parma: a glorious fictive arbor painted for a v. lucky nun by Antonio da Correggio, whose day is today.
Reposted by Christine Sukic
cethompson.bsky.social
Also, as a tangent, I'd love to see more of this kind of thing on #academicsky. More sharing of tools, ideas, and resources for teaching, not just endless doom amd gloom.

We should share our hard-won knowledge about pedagogy as eagerly and as often as we share our research!
aktange.bsky.social
Here you go! I'll write some new ones for this semester too. They loved them. The "read without your phone or screens in the room" was a revelation, and many of them decided to keep doing it. They had NO IDEA (& were horrified) how often they interrupt themselves to look at a phone for no reason.
Reading Scenario Experiments. This series of prompts is designed to get you thinking about how the setting for reading affects concentration, comprehension, and even the existential experience of reading. Every week, one of the following prompts will appear on the syllabus. I encourage you to try all of them that you are able. How does a different reading setting affect your mood? Your receptiveness to the prose? Your pleasure or difficulty reading? What are the particular impacts of changing your lighting or surroundings? What do you notice about yourself and about the work you are reading during this experiment? 
1.	read by candlelight (use a small lamp in dorms where no candles are allowed!)
2.	read for one hour without checking any devices, answering texts, etc.
3.	walk out into nature (climb a tree, sit on a rock, grab a spot in a hammock) and read
4.	host a reading night with friends & food (sit in companionable silence, reading without chatting)
5.	read aloud a chapter to someone else
6.	climb into bed at night and read by flashlight under the covers for at least 30 minutes, as if you’ve already been told “lights out” as a kid
7.	reread a chapter and see what new things you notice the second time through
8.	change your ambient-noise level: add music if you normally read in the quiet; or read without music if you are normally a music-listener
9.	read with a sketchpad at hand and sketch scenes, characters, or other elements from the story
10.	practice focused listening: have someone read to you
11.	make yourself a special, fancy snack on a real plate to nibble while eating: pay attention to the cooking or arranging or choosing of ingredients to make it especially appetizing first
12.	make tea (even if you’re not usually a tea drinker), and read and sip
13.	invent a new reading scenario for yourself, or repeat the one you liked the best from this term 

[writing assignment using these prompts follows; text character limit prevents inclusion of it in full]
christinesukic.bsky.social
Some brilliant ideas about reading here!
aktange.bsky.social
Here you go! I'll write some new ones for this semester too. They loved them. The "read without your phone or screens in the room" was a revelation, and many of them decided to keep doing it. They had NO IDEA (& were horrified) how often they interrupt themselves to look at a phone for no reason.
Reading Scenario Experiments. This series of prompts is designed to get you thinking about how the setting for reading affects concentration, comprehension, and even the existential experience of reading. Every week, one of the following prompts will appear on the syllabus. I encourage you to try all of them that you are able. How does a different reading setting affect your mood? Your receptiveness to the prose? Your pleasure or difficulty reading? What are the particular impacts of changing your lighting or surroundings? What do you notice about yourself and about the work you are reading during this experiment? 
1.	read by candlelight (use a small lamp in dorms where no candles are allowed!)
2.	read for one hour without checking any devices, answering texts, etc.
3.	walk out into nature (climb a tree, sit on a rock, grab a spot in a hammock) and read
4.	host a reading night with friends & food (sit in companionable silence, reading without chatting)
5.	read aloud a chapter to someone else
6.	climb into bed at night and read by flashlight under the covers for at least 30 minutes, as if you’ve already been told “lights out” as a kid
7.	reread a chapter and see what new things you notice the second time through
8.	change your ambient-noise level: add music if you normally read in the quiet; or read without music if you are normally a music-listener
9.	read with a sketchpad at hand and sketch scenes, characters, or other elements from the story
10.	practice focused listening: have someone read to you
11.	make yourself a special, fancy snack on a real plate to nibble while eating: pay attention to the cooking or arranging or choosing of ingredients to make it especially appetizing first
12.	make tea (even if you’re not usually a tea drinker), and read and sip
13.	invent a new reading scenario for yourself, or repeat the one you liked the best from this term 

[writing assignment using these prompts follows; text character limit prevents inclusion of it in full]
christinesukic.bsky.social
Ça me rappelle Palerme: un jeune homme en Vespa, un bébé dans les bras, cigarette au bec, conduite d’une main, sans casque!
christinesukic.bsky.social
CFP for next year's congress! #SFS2026
shakespearefrance.bsky.social
💡Time to flex those cognitive muscles!💡Our CFP for next year's conference on "Shakespeare and Intelligence" is out! ➡️ Please send your proposals by 15 September 2025 at [email protected]
Reposted by Christine Sukic
jdmccafferty.bsky.social
5 June 1610: The chamberlain of the City of #London orders #otd Richard Burbage be reimbursed & allowed keep ‘taffety silke & other necessaries’ from the water pageant in honour of Prince Henry’s creation as Prince of #Wales on 31 May (Dulwich Art Gallery) #WillPerformForCloth
christinesukic.bsky.social
Nous aussi nous sommes impatients : si seulement le train était à l’heure!
christinesukic.bsky.social
L’atelier @shakespearefrance.bsky.social SFS de la SAES commence demain!
saes-2025.bsky.social
🔍 Atelier SFS au SAES 2025 : Transitions à la Renaissance 🎭
L’atelier de la SFS explorera les mutations identitaires, religieuses et historiques à la Renaissance, entre figures queer, réforme et modernité.
📅 Du 5 au 7 juin 2025 à Toulouse !
#SAES2025 #SFS #Renaissance #Shakespeare #Transitions
Reposted by Christine Sukic
saes-2025.bsky.social
📍 Demain, c’est le grand jour ! Le Congrès SAES 2025 démarre à Toulouse 🎓✨
📅 Du 5 au 7 juin, conférences, ateliers et rencontres vous attendent !
🎉 Toute l’équipe est impatiente de vous retrouver pour faire vivre ensemble cette nouvelle édition du SAES.
#SAES2025 #Toulouse #VilleRose #CongrèsSAES
Reposted by Christine Sukic
shakespearefrance.bsky.social
A huge thanks to all our amazing guests and speakers, we've had fabulous fiftieth! If you've missed anything you can catch up on our Youtube channel!➡️https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bkg9jFvvT2U&list=PLLgheICnZPXeMX5MBeEAZUw9fwi_qPlob&index=4
christinesukic.bsky.social
It's here, it's out, you want it! The official programme!
We'll be looking to see you there for the 50th anniversary of the @shakespearefrance.bsky.social #sfs2025
Reposted by Christine Sukic
shakespearefrance.bsky.social
Demandez le programme! Here’s the full lineup for the upcoming SFS Conference 🎉
Reposted by Christine Sukic
peterpaulrubens.bsky.social
2/2 Scarlet ibis. Extraordinarily designed nature study by Maria Sibylla Merian.
Reposted by Christine Sukic
warburginstitute.bsky.social
🧠 Discover more about the life of Andreas Vesalius

In this Renaissance Lives talk, Sachiko Kusukawa revisits Vesalius’s legacy, revealing how his work emerged from the cultural and technological revolution of the Renaissance.

Watch now: warburg.sas.ac.uk/podcasts/ren... #Renaissance
Renaissance Lives | Andreas Vesalius: Anatomy and the World of Books
Please enable JavaScript in your web browser to get the best experience.
warburg.sas.ac.uk
christinesukic.bsky.social
Happy 50th birthday!
shakespearefrance.bsky.social
Join us in May for our annual conference on 'Local Habitation in Shakespeare' and a very festive programme as we celebrate the Société Française Shakespeare's 50th birthday 🎉!
Programme and registration form available at the following link: www.societefrancaiseshakespeare.org/annuaire/wp-...
Reposted by Christine Sukic
ox.ac.uk
NEW: @engfac.bsky.social's Dr Leah Veronese has unearthed a rare manuscript copy of Shakespeare’s famous Sonnet 116 tucked away in a 17th-century poetry collection.

This is only the second known manuscript copy of the sonnet ever discovered.

More info ⬇️
Oxford University researcher uncovers hidden copy of Shakespeare
Dr Leah Veronese from Oxford University's English Faculty has unearthed a rare manuscript copy of Shakespeare’s famous Sonnet 116 tucked away in a 17th-century poetry collection. This treasure was
www.ox.ac.uk
Reposted by Christine Sukic
joncooper-us.bsky.social
Pass it on.
#StandWithUkraine