He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and on the board of the Associazione Malatesta in Italy. The Age of Innocence is author Edith Whartons 12th novel. He has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, NEH Fellowships, and ACLS Fellowships he has been a Getty Fellow, a visiting fellow at New College, Oxford, and the Clark Lecturer at Trinity College, Cambridge. He is the general editor of Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture, and of the new Pelican Shakespeare. He has edited Ben Jonson's masques, Christopher Marlowe's poems and translations, the Oxford Authors John Milton, The Tempest and The Winter's Tale in The Oxford Shakespeare, Trollope's Lady Anna, and Edith Wharton's The Custom of the Country, The Age of Innocence and The Reef in the Oxford World's Classics. He is also the author of Imagining Shakespeare (2003), The Authentic Shakespeare (2002), Impersonations: The Performance of Gender in Shakespeare's England (Cambridge, 1996), The Illusion of Power (Berkeley, 1975), Inigo Jones (London and Berkeley, 1973, in collaboration with Sir Roy Strong), and The Jonsonian Masque (Cambridge, Mass., 1965). His most recent book is Spectacular Performances (2011), and The Reader in the Book is forthcoming in 2015. His work is interdisciplinary, and is increasingly concerned with the patronage system, the nature of representation, and performance practice in the Renaissance. Stephen Orgel has published widely on the political and historical aspects of Renaissance literature, theater, art history and the history of the book.
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