and Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. An expert in early modern social, cultural and political history, he has produced more than 14 books on subjects ranging from early modern correspondence to gender, politics and public history. He is Principle Investigator on the AHRC-funded project Gendered Interpretations of the V&A and Vasa Museums. He is co-Director of Cornerstone Heritage and with historian and TV presenter Dr Sam Willis, is co-Director of the Histories of the Unexpected public history brand. K it Heyam is a Lecturer in Early Modern English Literature at King's College London. Previously, they were Research Fellow on the AHRC-funded project Gendered Interpretations of the V&A and Vasa Museums (Department of History, University of Plymouth). They specialise in sexual/ gendered transgression in medieval and early modern history and literature and work publicly and academically towards increased historical representation of queer experience. Their first monograph (forthcoming, Amsterdam University Press) investigates the development of Edward II's queer reputation, and their article 'Gender Nonconformity and Military Internment: Curating the Knockaloe Slides' (Critical Military Studies, 2019) proposes a methodology for curating historical trans possibility. | 107 MUSEUM international D avison Chiwara is a lecturer in the Department of Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies at the Midlands State University in Zimbabwe. His research focuses on conservation of cultural property and public participation in the arts.