University Of Findlay Faculty Handbook Fsu
Research and Professional Interests:Organisms are enormously genetically diverse. Even traits under strong natural selection, such as fertility, longevity, and reproductive behavior can vary greatly among individuals within a single population, and much of this variation can be heritable.
We strive to understand why so much genetic variation persists for traits under strong selection and also to understand the consequences of this diversity for individuals, species, and communities. Members of the lab are studying the genetic, genomic, and evolutionary determinants of life span; the ecological genetics of sexual selection and mate choice; and genetic and social modifiers of growth, behavior, and fitness. We use different experimental organisms, including fruit flies and several species of poeciliid fish, and a diversity of techniques, including quantitative genetics, evolutionary and behavioral genomics and field studies.
Selected Publications:Cullumber, Z, Engel, N, Travis, J, Hughes, KA. Larger female brains do not reduce male sexual coercion.
Animal Behav In press.Valvo, JJ, Rodd, FH, Hughes, KA. Consistent female preference for rare and unfamiliar male color patterns in wild guppy populations.
Behavioral Ecology, Online ahead of press: MJ, Koffinas, L, Hughes KA. Habituation underpins preference for mates with novel phenotypes in the guppy. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 25.Kelly JK, Hughes KA, 2019. Pervasive linked selection and intermediate-frequency alleles are implicated in an evolve-and-resequencing experiment of Drosophila simulans. Genetics 211:943-961. Doi: 10.1534/genetics.118.301824.Culumber ZW, Kraft B, Lemakos V, Hoffner E, Travis J, Hughes KA, 2018.
GxG epistasis in growth and condition and the maintenance of genetic polymorphism in Gambusia holbrooki. Evolution 72:1146-1154. Doi: 10.1111/evo.13474.Kraft B, Lemakos VA, Travis J, Hughes KA, 2018. Pervasive indirect genetic effects on behavioral development in polymorphic eastern mosquitofish. Behavioral Ecology 29:289-300.
Doi: 10.1093/beheco/arx180.Rittschof, C. Advancing behavioural genomics by considering timescale. Nature Commun 9:489.Saltz JB, Bell AM, Flint J, Gomulkiewicz R, Hughes KA, Keagy J, 2018. Why does the magnitude of genotype-by-environment interaction vary? Ecology and Evolution 8:6342-6353. Doi: 10.1002/ece3.4128.
GARY TAYLOR, Department Chair, Dahl and Lottie Pryor Professor in Shakespearean Literature, Ph.D., Cambridge, is General Editor of the New Oxford Shakespeare, including Complete Works: Modern Critical Edition (2016), Complete Works: Critical Reference Edition (2017), and Authorship Companion (2017). He was also general editor of the Collected Works of 'our other Shakespeare,' Thomas Middleton (Oxford, 2008), which won the Modern Language Association's biennial prize for a Distinguished Scholarly edition and the Emily Dietz award for outstanding publication in early modern studies; he also co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Middleton (2012), the largest collection of new critical essays on Middleton ever published. The 'Middleton Trilogy' is now available in paperback. He general-edited two series published by Palgrave, 'Signs of Race' and 'History of Text Technologies'. He founded the interdisciplinary History of Text Technologies program at FSU, and has written about the practice and theory of editing in various periods and genres; in 2006 he gave the McKenzie lectures at Oxford University on Edward Blount, the chief publisher of the 1623 Shakespeare folio. Taylor's Moment by Moment by Shakespeare (MacMillan, 1985) was the winner of a Choice Award for 'Outstanding Academic Book.' His other books include a history of Shakespeare's reputation ( Reinventing Shakespeare, 1989: 'the most ambitious book on Shakespeare ever written', according to a review in Shakespeare Quarterly), a theory of artistic reputations generally ( Cultural Selection, 1996: 'brilliant insights and beautifully reasoned prose an original and striking analysis of culture', according to the New York Times Book Review), and 'an abbreviated history of Western manhood' ( Castration, 2000: 'terrific reading,' according to Salon.com).
He co-edited the first collection of essays on Shakespeare and Fletcher's partially-lost play The History of Cardenio (Oxford, 2012), and the same year his 'creative reconstruction' of Cardenio was performed in Indianapolis, where it was also the subject of an international scholarly colloquium, a, and another collection of scholarly essays (Palgrave, 2013). His play has most recently been performed by the Richmond Shakespeare Society (2017).
Taylor has also worked to communicate contemporary literary theory and criticism to a mass audience (newspapers, radio, TV, museums and theatres in North America and UK, including three Platforms at the Royal National Theatre, London). He was widely interviewed in 2016 in connection with the New Oxford Shakespeare's identification of Christopher Marlowe as Shakespeare's collaborator on the three Henry VI plays. Books. The New Oxford Shakespeare, Complete Works: Critical Reference Edition, gen. Gary Taylor, John Jowett, Terri Bourus, Gabriel Egan (Oxford, 2017). The New Oxford Shakespeare, Authorship Companion, ed.
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Gary Taylor and Gabriel Egan (Oxford, 2017). The New Oxford Shakespeare, Complete Works: Modern Critical Edition, gen. Gary Taylor, John Jowett, Terri Bourus, Gabriel Egan (Oxford, 2016). Buying Whiteness: Race, Culture, and Identity from Columbus to Hip Hop (volumes one and two of the series Signs of Race, published by Palgrave, 2005. The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works, Second Edition. Oxford University Press, 2005.
Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood. New York and London: Routledge, October 2000. Cultural Selection. New York: Basic Books, 1996. (paperback ed.) 1997.
Shakespeare Reshaped 1606-1623. With John Jowett. Oxford: Oxford U P, 1993.
1997. Reinventing Shakespeare: A Cultural History from the Restoration to the Present. New York & London: Weidenfield & Nicholson, 1989.
( Oxford U P paperback ed.) 1991. William Shakespeare: A Textual Companion. With Stanley Wells, John Jowett and William Montgomery. Oxford: Oxford U P, 1987. (paperback ed.) New York: W.
Norton, 1997. Moment by Moment by Shakespeare. London and New York: MacMillan, 1985. Published in the United States as To Analyze Delight. Modernizing Shakespeare's Spelling with Three Studies in the Text of Henry V. With Stanley Wells.
New York & London: Oxford U P, 1979.Books Edited. The Creation and Re-Creation of Cardenio: Performing Shakespeare, Transforming Cervantes, ed. Terri Bourus and Gary Taylor (Palgrave, 2013). The Quest for Cardenio: Shakespeare, Cervantes, Fletcher, and the Lost Play, ed. David Carnegie and Gary Taylor (Oxford, 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Middleton, ed. Gary Taylor and Trish Thomas Henley (Oxford, 2012).
The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, Oxford University Press, 2007. Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture: A Companion to The Collected Works, Oxford University Press, 2007. John Fletcher, The Tamer Tamed, Revels Plays, 2006, co-edited with Celia R. Daileader. The Norton Shakespeare: Based on the Oxford Text.
New York: W.W. Norton, 1997. Macbeth. Edited and annotated for CD-ROM edition. With Jim Bride.
New York: Bride Media, 1997. Romeo and Juliet. Edited and annotated for CD-ROM edition. With Jim Bride & Celia Daileader. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997. Shakespeare's Editors from Rowe to Alexander.
With Stanley Wells. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 1988. The Complete Works, William Shakespeare. With Stanley Wells. New York & London: Oxford U P, 1986. On Compact Disc (Oxford, 1989); Rpt.
In paperback (Oxford, 1994); Rpt. In three-volume paperback (Oxford, 1994). The Complete Works: Original Spelling Edition, William Shakespeare. With Stanley Wells. Oxford U P, 1986.
The Division of the Kingdoms: Shakespeare's Two Versions of King Lear. New York & London: Oxford U P, 1983. In paperback edition, 1986.Articles and Essays (1995-). 'Death of an English Major,' in The Best American Essays 2019, ed. Rebecca Solnit (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, October 2019). 'Who Read What When?' In Early Shakespeare, 1588-94, ed.
Rory Loughnane and Andrew Power (Cambridge University Press, 2020), 284-301. 'Shakespeare's Early Gothic Hamlet', (July, 2019), 4-25. 'Finding Anonymous in the Digital Archives: The Problem of Arden of Faversham,' Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (2019),DOI 10.1093/llc/fqy075. ' The Tamer Tamed: Dating Shakespeare's Interactions with Fletcher,' Memoria di Shakespeare 5 (2018), 118-48, DOI 10.-8759/14508. Gary Taylor, John V.
Nance, and Keegan Cooper, 'Shakespeare and Who? Aeschylus, Edward III, and Thomas Kyd', Shakespeare Survey 70 (2017), 146-53.
“Fake Shakespeare”, in Journal of Early Modern Studies,5 (2016). 'Collaboration,' in Shakespeare 2016, ed.
Dympna Callaghan and Suzanne Gossett (Bloomsbury/Shakespeare Association of America, 2016). “Shakespeare’s Illegitimate Daughter,” Memoria di Shakespeare, 2 (2015), 177-94. Gary Taylor and John Nance, 'Imitation or Collaboration? Marlowe and the Early Shakespeare Canon', Shakespeare Survey 68 (2015), 32-47. 'The Taming of the Thing,' Washington Shakespeare Theatre (D.C.), 2015. 'Why Did Shakespeare Collaborate?' Shakespeare Survey 67 (2014),1-17.
'Empirical Middleton: Macbeth, Adaptation, and Micro-authorship', Shakespeare Quarterly, 35 (2014), 239-72. Terri Bourus and Gary Taylor, ' Measure for Measure(s): Performance-Testing the Adaptation Hypothesis,' Shakespeare 10:2 (2014), 363-401. 'Middleton and Macbeth,' in Macbeth: The Norton Critical Edition, ed. Robert Miola (Norton, 2014), 294-303. 'Sleight of Mind: Cognitive Illusions and Shakespearian Desire', Performing Shakespeare, Transforming Cervantes, ed. Taylor and Bourus (Palgrave, 2013), 125-68.
Gary Taylor and Stephen Wagschal, 'Cervantes or Shelton? The Sources of Cardenio and Double Falsehood,' Performing Shakespeare, Transforming Cervantes, ed. Taylor and Bourus(Palgrave, 2013), 15-29. 'History. Plays. Genre. Games', in The Oxford Handbook to Thomas Middleton, ed.
Taylor and Henley (Oxford, 2012), 47-63. 'A History of The History of Cardenio', in The Quest for Cardenio, ed.
Carnegie and Taylor (Oxford, 2012), 11-61. 'The Embassy, The City, The Court, The Text: Cardenio Performed in 1613,' in The Quest for Cardenio, 286-307. 'White Like Us': Early Modern King Kongs and Calibans', in Race and Modernity, ed.