Urban(e) visualization and Early Modern drama: Ben Jonson’s ‘Spectral Cities’
Author(s) -
Anthony W. Johnson
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nordic journal of english studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.18
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1654-6970
pISSN - 1502-7694
DOI - 10.35360/njes.422
Subject(s) - drama , field (mathematics) , history , order (exchange) , english language , media studies , sociology , political science , art , literature , linguistics , philosophy , business , mathematics , finance , pure mathematics
This paper explores urbanization, and the impact of new technologies on early modern dramatic visualization. It demonstrates how the frontispiece to Ben Jonson’s 1616 Folio summons up spectres of antiquity, high renaissance culture, and the renovatio urbis: reconfiguring them as models for new negotiations of the urban and urbane. It reveals how the Folio’s opening play, Every Man in his Humour, powerfully maps Florentine urban geography and practice onto its revised London setting. And, equally, how its closing masque, The Golden Age Restor’d, formally complements the programme of Jonson’s collaborator, Inigo Jones, for the new Whitehall Banqueting House (1622).
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