Makale
Tatar, Yağmur. (2020). “Spirits to enforce, art to enchant”: Metatheatricality and Art in The Tempest and Hag-Seed. British and American Studies ,(26): 93-100. DOI: 10.35923/BAS.631.02
Tatar, Yağmur. (2021). “Reader, unbury him with a word”: The Revenant and/as Evil in Elizabeth Kostova’s. The Historian. Bulletin of the Transylvania University of Brasov, 14(63): 167-176. DOI: 10.31926/but.pcs.2021.63.14.3
Tatar, Yağmur. (2022). “Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more”: The Politics of Friendship in Julius Caesar. BAS. British and American Studies, 28: 21-28. DOI: 10.35923/BAS.28.02
Uluslararası bilimsel toplantılarda sunulan ve bildiri kitabında basılan bildiriler
“Spirits to enforce, art to enchant”: Metatheatricality and Art in The Tempest and Hag-Seed. The 29th Annual International British and American Studies Conference. West University of Timisoara, English Department. Romania, May 2019.
Resurrecting Medea: Hauntology in Revisionist Mythmaking. International Conference on Myths, Archetypes and Symbols: “Models and Alternatives” London Interdisciplinary Research Centre, England, September 2019.
“Reader, unbury him with a word”: Revenant and Evil in Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian. The Children of the Night International Dracula Conference. Romanian Dracula Congress, Timisoara, Romania, April 2021.
“Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more”: The Politics of Friendship in Julius Caesar. The 30th Annual International British and American Studies Conference. West University of Timisoara, English Department. Romania, May 2021.
Shakespeare’s Saturnalia: Julius Caesar, Carnival Politics and the Elizabethan Theatre. The Twenty-Third Annual British Graduate Shakespeare Conference (BRITGRAD 2021), The Shakespeare Institute, virtual, August 2021.
Repetitions, Variations, Symmetries: Borges on Shakespeare. All the World’s a Stage: Theatre, Staging, and Adaptations of the Early Modern, University of Liverpool, England. April 2021.
“Anger’s my meat; I sup upon myself”: Carnivalesque Revenge in Coriolanus. Revisiting Revenge: New Perspectives for the Study of Revenge Tragedies (late 16th–early 18th century), Ghent University, Belgium. April 2021.
The Anxiety of (Not) Remembering: “Shakespeare’s Memory”. Yeditepe Graduate Conference of Literary Studies: “Rewriting / Revisiting the Past” Yeditepe University, English Department, Istanbul, Turkey – conference organization and attendance, June 2021.
A Life Ungiven, Given: A Bakhtinian Approach to Revisionist Mythmaking in Ursula K. Le Guin’s Lavinia. The 31st Annual International British and American Studies Conference, 2022.
Turning Turk: Scenes of Conversion and Early Modern Representations of Ottoman Identity. The Twenty-Fourth Annual British Graduate Shakespeare Conference (BRITGRAD 2022), The Shakespeare Institute, virtual, August 2022.
Re-locating Shakespeare in Turkish Cinema: Metin Erksan’s Angel of Vengeance – The Female Hamlet. All the World’s a Stage: Theatre, Staging, and Adaptations of the Early Modern, University of Liverpool, England. April 2023.
[Upcoming] Mourning Becomes Cleopatra: Ars Moriendi and The Quest for the “Beautiful Death” in Antony and Cleopatra. The 32nd Annual International British and American Studies Conference. West University of Timisoara, English Department. Romania, May 2023.
Bilimsel Projeler
Graduate Researcher in Turkish Shakespeares Project, 2021-ongoing. General Director and Project Supervisor: Assoc. Prof. Murat Öğütçü
“Turkish Shakespeares” aims to introduce texts, productions and researches on Turkish Shakespeares to a broader international audience of students, teachers, and researchers. Every two weeks, new blog entries, short descriptions and links to productions and adaptations, and a bibliography with hyperlinks of secondary works on Shakespeare in Turkey will be added to the project website, among many other contents.
Konferans-Seminer- Atölye Çalışmaları
Organized: Yeditepe Graduate Conference of Literary Studies: “Rewriting/Revisiting the Past” (International Virtual Conference for Graduate Students of Literary Studies, Istanbul, Turkey. June 2021.