Literature, Mapping, and the Politics of Space in Early Modern Britain

by
Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2010-12-16
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

Mapping has become a key term in current critical discourse, describing a particular cognitive mode of gaining control over the world, of synthesising cultural and geographical information, and of successfully navigating both physical and mental space. In this 2001 collection, an international team of renaissance scholars analyses the material practice behind this semiotic concept. By examining map-driven changes in gender identities, body conception, military practices, political structures, national imaginings and imperial aspirations, the essays in this volume expose the multi-layered investments of historical 'paper landscapes' in the politics of space. Ranging widely across visual and textual artifacts implicated in the culture of mapping, from the literature of Shakespeare, Spenser, Marlowe and Jonson, to representations of body, city, nation and empire, Literature, Mapping, and the Politics of Space argues for a thorough re-evaluation of the impact of cartography on the shaping of social and political identities in early modern Britain.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations
Preface
Notes on contributors
Introduction
Contested Spaces
Absorption and representation: mapping England in the early modern House of Commons
A map of Greater Cambria
Britannia rules the waves?: images of Empire in Elizabethan England
Performing London: the map and the city in ceremony
Visible bodies: cartography and anatomy
Literature and Landscape
The scene of cartography in King Lear
Unlawful presences: the politics of military space and the problem of women in Tamburlaine
Marginal waters: Pericles and the idea of jurisdiction
'On the famous voyage': Ben Jonson and civic space
Imaginary journeys: Spenser, Drayton, and the poetics of national space
Do real knights need maps? Charting moral, geographical and representational uncertainty in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene Joanne
Epilogue
The folly of maps and modernity Richard Helgerson
Select bibliography
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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