Dr Kate Travers studies the literatures of medieval Italy, and their reception. They work primarily on literatures in Italian, Occitan, and French, and are interested in what medieval literatures and book cultures can tell us about broader political questions.
After completing their PhD at New York University (NYU) in 2021, Kate taught at NYU and Durham University, before joining St Hugh’s College, Oxford, to take up the Powys Roberts Postdoctoral Fellowship in Modern Languages.
Kate’s work has appeared in The Italianist and NeMLA Italian Studies. They are an Assistant Editor for gender/sexuality/italy. Kate is currently finishing their first book project, Making the Italian Songbook: Gender and Compilation from Old Occitan Song to Medieval Italian Lyric, that investigates how gender operates within Italy’s medieval poetry books. Drawing on theorists such as Lauren Berlant, Making the Italian Songbook argues that the material aspect of the songbook shapes how gender emerges from the medieval poetry book. The figures of women poets and speakers found in Italy’s collections of medieval poetry shape the Italian songbook as it develops into the authorial collection. The book argues that gender functions as an aesthetic category, like a genre, within the Italian poetry book, expressing the tensions inherent within northern Italy’s plurilingual vernacular culture. Kate’s second book project, Fantasies of Empire in Medieval Italy, focusses on how Italy’s medieval literatures conceptualized “empire” and the ways these literatures were then used to support modern colonial projects.
For more information, see Kate's profile page on the St Hugh's website.