Dr Kate Rumbold MA, MA, DPhil

Photograph of Dr Kate Rumbold

Department of English Literature
Honorary Associate Professor

Contact details

Address
University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

I’m an Honorary Associate Professor in English Literature. My research explores the ways in which Shakespeare is quoted and valued in literature and culture, from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century. Writers and artists of all kinds have quoted Shakespeare since his own lifetime. My research has shown how the very act of quotation conferred status and authority on Shakespeare, and helped to cement his reputation for extraordinary insight into human nature.

I have subsequently explored how we can harness the emotional authority invested in Shakespeare quotations to engage adult English learners today. I now work freelance to design and deliver literature workshops, training and mentoring for adult literacy learners and tutors in partnership with ,  and the .

Qualifications

  • BA (Oxon)
  • MA (Oxon)
  • MA (London)
  • DPhil (Oxon)
  • PGCert in Academic Practice
  • Fellow of the Higher Education Academy
  • Level 2 and Level 3 Counselling Skills
  • Institute of Leadership and Management Level 5 Coaching and Mentoring

Biography

I joined the English Department as a Lecturer in 2010, after completing a four-year AHRC research fellowship at the Shakespeare Institute. Before coming to Birmingham I studied at Trinity College, University of Oxford, and at University College London.

In 2018 I initiated and led a partnership between the National Literacy Trust and the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡ – the first higher education institution to partner with the charity. The NLT takes a place-based approach to supporting and promoting areas of particular ‘literacy need’ in this country. Together, we established , which launched in 2019 and has continued to support children, teenagers and adults across the city ever since (now led at UoB by Dr Emily Wingfield).Ìý

In 2022 I left the University to take up a freelance role in adult literacy education. I now regularly deliver workshops, courses and coaching and mentoring for and other community groups in the West Midlands and Warwickshire, in collaboration with Antonia Parker Smith and Marcus Paragpuri, who together form , and the .Ìý

Research

I studied English Literature at the University of Oxford (BA English Language and Literature) and University College London (MA in English: Renaissance to Enlightenment).Ìý These wide-ranging undergraduate and postgraduate literature courses sparked my interest in the ways Shakespeare’s words have been used and reshaped by subsequent writers, especially in the eighteenth century.Ìý I completed a doctorate at Oxford on Shakespeare and the eighteenth-century novel, supervised by Prof. Abigail Williams.

I extended my study of Shakespeare’s reception to the present day when, as a Research Fellow at the Shakespeare Institute, University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡, I coordinated the AHRC-funded project ‘Interrogating Cultural Value in the Twenty-First Century: The Case of Shakespeare’ (2006-10).Ìý Led by Kate McLuskie, and with major contributions from PhD students Emily Linnemann and Sarah Olive, the project examined Shakespeare’s perceived value in education, publicly-funded theatre and new media, engaging with policymakers and practitioners through consultation with the Royal Shakespeare Company, Arts Council England and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

This collaborative project — which showed how the value of ‘Shakespeare’ is continually recreated by individuals and institutions — informed my ongoing individual research. In my monograph, Ìý(Cambridge University Press, 2016), I showed that novelists who quoted Shakespeare were not only borrowing authority from the playwright, at a time when the genre of prose fiction was gaining respectability. By having their characters invoke Shakespeare’s words, and praise his insight into human nature, the novelists were also conferring that newfound authority and respectability on Shakespeare too. It was a process of mutual promotion that helped establish the reputation of both Shakespeare and the novel.

Beyond the novel, the first dedicated books of quotations from Shakespeare also appeared in the eighteenth century. A fellowship at the Folger Shakespeare Library and visiting scholarship to Columbia University (both 2011), as well as ongoing research at the Library Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡â€™s Shakespeare Collection, enabled me to trace the extent to which the values ascribed to Shakespeare in formal education in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by these selective and much-reprinted texts. I was able to work with other scholars to explore the role of quotation in a much wider range of genres and media, thanks to my co-editor Julie Maxwell and the international team of contributors to Ìý(Cambridge University Press, 2019).Ìý

Alongside my work on quotation, I have pursued my long-term interest in the role of literature in adult literacy education. As a graduate student, I also worked as a policy analyst with the National Literacy Trust’s research team, writing about the benefits of . While a research fellow and lecturer, I also volunteered in an English skills class at my local adult education college.Ìý It was in those classes that I first considered the potential benefits for learners of engaging with more imaginative literature alongside the practical texts that were the main focus of the course.

In 2013-14 I was Principal Investigator on the interdisciplinary AHRC-funded project ‘The Uses of Poetry: Measuring the Value of Engaging with Poetry in Lifelong Learning and Development’ (part of the AHRC’s wider Cultural Value Project).Ìý The project brought together a wide-ranging interdisciplinary team of researchers to investigate and articulate the benefits of engaging with poetry at all stages of life.Ìý My co-investigators were Prof. Patricia Riddell (Psychology, Reading) and Prof. Viv Ellis (Education, Brunel), and the project research fellow was Dr Karen Simecek (Philosophy, now Warwick).Ìý Karen and I co-edited the resulting special issue of , and co-wrote an article about.

In 2017, I piloted an outreach workshop that brought together my interests in quotation, literacy and lifelong learning. Inspired by the vast collection of anthologies in the Shakespeare Collection at the Library Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡, my workshop invited adult English skills learners from Birmingham Adult Education Service to respond on a personal level to quotations from Shakespeare’s plays. The memories and stories that flowed from quotes on ‘love’, ‘grief’ and ‘courage’ were rich, varied and moving. The learners drew freely on their own life experiences to test the meaning and value of Shakespeare’s words and phrases. By promoting emotional engagement with imaginative texts, the workshop fostered feelings of confidence and motivation that were transferable to all parts of the learners’ studies.The success of this pilot and subsequent workshops led me in 2018 to initiate and lead a new partnership between the National Literacy Trust and the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡. Shakespeare workshops were, and continue to be, a core programme for the .Ìý‘Shakespeare and Me’ is now a module built into the Birmingham Adult Education Service English skills curriculum, and is credited with <>. My research now examines the benefits of using literary texts to engage learners’ emotions in the adult education classroom.

Other activities

I am a qualified coach and a member of the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡’s Coaching Academy

I was the UoB project lead for Birmingham Stories (now National Literacy Trust Birmingham), and co-chaired the Strategic Steering Group (2018-2022)

Previous roles: 

  • Impact Lead for the School of EDACS (2017-2018)
  • Head of Postgraduate Studies (Research) for the School of EDACS (2015-16) 
  • Admissions Tutor for English (2012-14)
  • Chair, Birmingham Eighteenth-Century Centre (2012-14)
  • Committee member, British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
  • Associated member of the Shakespeare Institute

Publications

Recent publications

Book

Rumbold, K & Maxwell, J (eds) 2018, . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Rumbold, K 2016, . Cambridge University Press.

McLuskie, K & Rumbold, K 2014, . Manchester University Press, Manchester.

Article

Rumbold, K & Simecek, K 2016, '', Changing English, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 335-350.

Rumbold, K 2016, '', Shakespeare Survey, vol. 69.

Rumbold, K 2011, '', Shakespeare Survey, vol. 64, pp. 25-37. <>

Chapter (peer-reviewed)

Rumbold, K 2013, . in S Bennett & C Carson (eds), Shakespeare beyond English: a global experiment. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 227-236. <>

Chapter

Rumbold, K 2016, . in BR Smith (ed.), The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare: Cambridge Shakespeare Encyclopedia volume 2: The World's Shakespeare, 1660–Present . vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, pp. 1290-1297.

Rumbold, K 2016, . in BR Smith (ed.), Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 1688-1694.

Rumbold, K 2013, . in P Edmondson, P Prescott & E Sullivan (eds), A Year of Shakespeare: Re-living the World Shakespeare Festival. The Arden Shakespeare, London, pp. 149. <>

Rumbold, K 2013, . in S Regan (ed.), Reading 1759: Literary Culture in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Britain and France., Ch 10, Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850), Bucknell University Press, Lewisburg, pp. 187-205.

Rumbold, K 2013, . in A Year of Shakespeare: Re-living the World Shakespeare Festival. The Arden Shakespeare, London, pp. 255. <>

Rumbold, K 2012, . in F Ritchie & P Sabor (eds), Shakespeare in the Eighteenth Century. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 254.

Book/Film/Article review

Rumbold, K 2011, '', Shakespeare, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 217.

Editorial

Rumbold, K & Simecek, K 2016, '', Changing English, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 309-313.