“Getting Started with Digital Learning Objects” Seminar presented at RBMS 2022 conference, What Now? Reflection, Reckoning, and Recovery. Virtual, June 2022.
A True Guide to Glory: Women, Social Order, and Gender Expectations in Seventeenth-Century English Funeral Sermons,” presented at the Renaissance Society of America conference, Dublin, Ireland, April 2021. Sponsored session, Iter Project.
Panel Chair and Organizer, “New Technologies and Renaissance Studies IX: Using Digital Methods to Reveal Women’s Networks and Movements,” at the Renaissance Society of America conference, Dublin, Ireland, April 2021. Sponsored session, Iter Project.
“Getting Started in Digital History Workshop: Introduction to Network Analysis” presented at the American Historical Association conference, Chicago, January 3-6, 2019.
“Lifting the Hood: Establishing the “Worshipful Company of Stationers”: Women and Marriage Networks in the Foundation of the Stationers’ Company” Short talk session, presented at the American Historical Association conference, Chicago, January 3-6, 2019.
“Worshipful Company of Stationers”: Women and Marriage Networks in the Foundation of the Stationers’ Company—Early Findings.” Presented at the Sixteenth Century Studies conference, Albuquerque, NM, November 1-4, 2018
“Finding Early Modern Women’s Agency Through Network Analysis,” Tool Workshop on Network Analysis presented at The Attending to Early Modern Women Conference, Milwaukee, WI, June 13-16, 2018.
““The Printer to the Courteous Reader,” The Printer’s Role in Shaping the Early Modern Reading Experience” Presented at the Arizona Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies Conference, Scottsdale, AZ, February 5-7, 2015.
“Elizabeth as Nation: Finding English National Identity in Dedications to the Queen,” Western Conference on British Studies in San Antonio, TX, September 19-20, 2008.
“Public Imaginings and Public Debate: Representing Elizabeth in Print,” Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies at The Huntington Library, San Marino, Ca., March 28-30, 2008.
“‘To the most Godlye, virtuous, and mightye Princes Elizabeth’: Politics and Gender in the Dedications to Elizabeth I,”: Progress report. Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies at University of California, Riverside. March 2005.
“‘To the most High and vertuouse Princesse Elizabeth’: The Debate Over Female Rule in the Dedications to Elizabeth I,” Sixteenth Century Studies Conference at Pittsburgh, PA, October 30-November 2, 2003.
“‘…it is a foule reproche for other Princes to bee ouercome by a Queen in al virtues’: Gender and Identity in the Dedications to Elizabeth I.” Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies, Claremont Graduate College, Claremont, CA, April 5-7, 2002.
“‘To the most godlye, mightye, and virtuous princes Elizabeth’: Identity and Gender in the Dedications to Elizabeth I.” Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association Conference, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, May 2001.
“Elizabeth I and the Nation: Inventing England,” Western Conference on British Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, October 1999.
“From ‘Narrow Seas’ to English Channel: The Role of the Channel in the Formation of English National Identity” Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association Conference, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, May 1999.
“Elizabeth’s Nation: National Identity Creation in Sixteenth-Century England,” Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA, March 26-28,1999.