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Ben Jonson in Context

Ben Jonson in Context

Ben Jonson in Context

Julie Sanders, University of Nottingham
January 2014
Available
Paperback
9781107637092
£38.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    Bringing together a group of established and emergent Jonson scholars, this volume reacts to major advances in thinking about the writer and his canon of works. The study is divided into two distinct parts: the first considers the Jonsonian career and output from biographical, critical, and performance-based angles; the second looks at cultural and historical contexts building on rich interdisciplinary work. Social historians work alongside literary critics to provide a diverse and varied account of Jonson. These are less standard surveys of the field than vibrant interventions into current critical debates. The short-essay format of the collection seeks less to harmonize and homogenize than to raise awareness of new avenues of research on Jonson, including studies informed by book history, cultural geography, the law and legal discourse, the history of science and interests in material culture.

    • Provides new angles on Jonson as an author and within the context of his time
    • Puts Jonson's plays and poetry into a rich dialogue with one another, rather than considering them in isolation
    • Essays are written by social historians as well as literary critics in order to provide as diverse and varied an account of Jonson as possible

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… the short-essay format works successfully, making the experience of reading the book through something of a pleasant and informative addiction.' Notes and Queries

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 2014
    Paperback
    9781107637092
    392 pages
    229 × 152 × 21 mm
    0.5kg
    18 b/w illus. 1 map
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • Timeline Sarah Grandage
    • Part I. Life, Works, and Afterlife:
    • 1. Tales of a life Richard Dutton
    • 2. Jonson in the Elizabethan period Matthew Steggle
    • 3. Jonson in the Jacobean period Andrew McRae
    • 4. Jonson in the Caroline period Martin Butler
    • 5. Genre Katherine Eisaman Maus
    • 6. Friends, collaborators, and rivals Michelle O'Callaghan
    • 7. Jonson and Shakespeare Mark Robson
    • 8. Editions and editors Eugene Giddens
    • 9. Critical reception James Loxley
    • 10. Performance afterlives Lois Potter
    • Part II. Cultural and Historical Contexts:
    • 11. London and urban space Adam Zucker
    • 12. The Globe and the open air amphitheatres Tiffany Stern
    • 13. The Whitefriars and the children's companies Lucy Munro
    • 14. The Blackfriars Theatre and the indoor theatres Janette Dillon
    • 15. Provinces, parishes, and neighbourhoods Steve Hindle
    • 16. The court Malcolm Smuts
    • 17. Masques, courtly and provincial Karen Britland
    • 18. Music David Lindley
    • 19. Dance Barbara Ravelhofer
    • 20. Manuscript culture and reading practices James Knowles
    • 21. Print culture and reading practices Alan B. Farmer
    • 22. Visual culture John Peacock
    • 23. The body Ben Morgan
    • 24. Law, crime, and punishment Lorna Hutson
    • 25. Religion Julie Maxwell
    • 26. Politics Andrew Hadfield
    • 27. Rank Clare McManus
    • 28. Households Kate Chedgzoy
    • 29. Foreign travel and exploration Rebecca Ann Bach
    • 30. Domestic travel and social mobility Julie Sanders
    • 31. Money and consumerism Christopher Burlinson
    • 32. Land Garrett A. Sullivan Jr.
    • 33. Patronage Helen Ostovich
    • 34. Architecture Mimi Yiu
    • 35. Food Robert Appelbaum
    • 36. Alchemy, magic, and the sciences Margaret Healy
    • 37. Clothing and identity Eleanor Lowe
    • 38. Gender and sexuality Mario DiGangi
    • Further reading.
      Contributors
    • Julie Sanders, Sarah Grandage, Richard Dutton, Matthew Steggle, Andrew McRae, Martin Butler, Katherine Eisaman Maus, Michelle O'Callaghan, Mark Robson, Eugene Giddens, James Loxley, Lois Potter, Adam Zucker, Tiffany Stern, Lucy Munro, Janette Dillon, Steve Hindle, Malcolm Smuts, Karen Britland, David Lindley, Barbara Ravelhofer, James Knowles, Alan B. Farmer, John Peacock, Ben Morgan, Lorna Hutson, Julie Maxwell, Andrew Hadfield, Clare McManus, Kate Chedgzoy, Rebecca Ann Bach, Christopher Burlinson, Garrett A. Sullivan Jr., Helen Ostovich, Mimi Yiu, Robert Appelbaum, Margaret Healy, Eleanor Lowe, Mario DiGangi

    • Editor
    • Julie Sanders , University of Nottingham

      Julie Sanders is Professor of English Literature and Drama at the University of Nottingham. She is the author of Ben Jonson's Theatrical Republics (1998) and has recently edited The New Inn for The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson.