

Research Interests
- Early Modern Drama
- Performance Studies & Theatre History
- Cultural Geography & Mobility Studies
- Ecocriticism & Blue Humanities
- Disability Studies
- Affect Studies
About Me
Ann-Sophie Bosshard (she/her) is a doctoral researcher in Prof. Dr. Isabel Karremann’s SNSF-project “DramaSCAPEs”. She completed her MA in German literature/linguistics and English literature/linguistics at the University of Zurich and the University of Tübingen, and holds a «Lehrdiplom für Maturitätsschulen» from the University of Zurich.
Ann-Sophie Bosshard’s PhD-project is entitled “Travel-Scapes: Mobility, Community, and the Ethics of Emplacement in Early Modern Drama”. The project investigates how representations of mobility on the early modern stage forged affective and cognitive communities, and how such communities responded to mobile people, objects, and ideas in ethical terms. The project focuses on playtexts that stage phenomena like travel and migration, displacement and emplacement, infrastructures, and networks. Several overarching research questions guide the reading of these texts:
- What challenges and opportunities are negotiated in the plays when communities encounter mobile agents or become mobile themselves?
- How do the plays affectively and cognitively address their audiences and what ethical, communal responses do they invoke?
- How do these considerations shape our critical understanding of such affective and cognitive communities in an age of mobility?
As the plays stage how communities in playworlds respond to mobility in ethical terms, they offer affective and cognitive models for the audiences’ own responses in the playhouse and beyond. By exploring such communal responses to social changes resulting from mobility, the project addresses concerns that were as pertinent in the early modern period as they are today.
Recent Activities
Conference participation:
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Teaching
In the Autumn Semester 2024, I taught the BA-seminar “Staging the Early Modern City” in the module ‘Literary Histories: Renaissance and Early Modern Period’.