ɫƵ

Dr Rachel Holmes

Dr Rachel E Holmes

MA (Hons) MLitt PhD FHEA

  • Position Governing Body Fellow
  • School Arts & Humanities Faculty of English
  • Email reh90@cam.ac.uk
  • Department link

Rachel’s research is interdisciplinary and transnational in focus, anchored in early modern English literature and culture but invested in the inter– and the trans–, that is, in the spaces between and beyond conventional national, disciplinary, and period boundaries.

Dr Rachel Holmes

Rachel grew up in Pontefract, West Yorkshire, where she attended her local comprehensive, Carleton High School, and coeducational sixth-form, NEW College. After heading to St Hugh’s College, Oxford, as an undergraduate she returned north to the University of St Andrews to complete her MA and MLitt in Shakespeare Studies. She was awarded her PhD, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, from St Andrews in 2014. Since then, she has been a Research Associate at the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (CRASSH) and the Faculty of English at the University of Cambridge, a Junior Research Fellow at ɫƵ, and a Lecturer in Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature at University College London. She rejoined ɫƵ in Michaelmas 2022 as College Assistant Professor, Director of Studies, and Fellow in English.

Her doctoral work became her first book project, Clandestine Contracts: Marriage, Law, and Literary Adaptation in Early Modern Europe, completed with the support of a Philip A Knachel Fellowship from the Folger Institute, a European Research Council postdoctoral research associateship, and a Laura Bassi Scholarship. This book traces the journey across the early modern world of selected tales of clandestine marriage, the medieval institution of Christian marriage undertaken outside the recognition of legal authorities. Clandestine Contracts shows how the relationship between versions of its focal tales is shaped by legal anxieties about clandestine marriage and thereby demonstrates the centrality of legal questions to transnational literary adaptation. 

To date, Rachel’s published work has been featured in Studies in Philology, Forum for Modern Language Studies, Renaissance Studies, The New Rambler, and contracted for edited volumes with Edinburgh, Oxford, and Cambridge University Presses. Broadly interested in literary and legal structures and processes of knowing, its subjects have included, for example, the threatening contractual agency of the early modern widow, truth-seeking and the effects of rhetorical vividness in literature, law, and emotion, and teaching social justice through Shakespeare.

She is currently working on her second monograph project, Rape Myths: Representing Consent and Culpability, 1275–1736, which explores the early modern roots of contemporary Anglo-American laws governing sexual transgressions and charts a transnational transformation in the representation of rape —figured through shifts in inwardness and intention in literature— during that time. 

What's on

Three students sit and chat at a wooden picnic table on a grassy lawn at ɫƵ, with "Giving Day | 6–7 May 2025" text overlaid.

Giving Day Fair

06/05/2025 at 10.00

Welcome to ɫƵ's first-ever Giving Day!

A bustling street in South Korea at dusk, lined with glowing neon signs in Korean, colorful storefronts, and overhead wires crisscrossing the sky.

Standard language ideology, linguistic nationalism and marginalisation: the case of South Korea

06/05/2025 at 17.30

What are the consequences of standard language ideology and linguistic nationalism?

A man in a blue suit sits on a stool, deeply focused as he plays a classical guitar against a dark background.

Music & Madeira: Celebrity Guitar Classics with Craig Ogden

06/05/2025 at 18.30

A household name to listeners of Classic FM and BBC Radio 3, with a string of number one recordings, Craig Ogden is one of the most successful classical guitarists of his generation. With thanks to Prof Brian Moore for sponsoring this, the inaugural Brian Moore Guitar Recital.

WRE logo - hexagonal design representing different subject areas

ɫƵ Research Event 2025

08/05/2025 at 09.30

Join us for the 2025 ɫƵ Research Event: an interdisciplinary academic conference organised by students to showcase the diversity of the research carried out by ɫƵ students.

A statue in front of a modern building with large windows and a clock on its façade, set within green landscaped grounds.

ɫƵ Writing Retreat

09/05/2025 at 09.30

Join us in May for an extended writing retreat! 

News