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Printed Image in Early Modern London
A01=Joseph Monteyne
Author_Joseph Monteyne
Bell Man
Bird's Eye
Bird’s Eye
British art history
Category=AGA
charles
Charles II's Government
Charles II’s Government
commercial print exchange
culture
Early Modern London
early modern print culture
Eikon Basilike
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Exclusion Crisis
fair
frost
Frost Fair
God's Terrible Voice
God’s Terrible Voice
Grape Vine
Graphic Culture
Graphic Satire
Green Ribbon Club
historical visual representation London
Hollar's Prints
Hollar’s Prints
plague iconography
Pope's Head Alley
Pope’s Head Alley
Popish Cruelties
Protestant Tutor
Restoration London
Royal Exchange
Sam's Coffee House
Sam’s Coffee House
Smooth Space
Temple Bar
Turkish Coffee House
urban social dynamics
visual culture studies
Weekly Bills
William Faithorne
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780754660194
- Weight: 793g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 19 Oct 2007
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Presenting an inventive body of research that explores the connections between urban movements, space, and visual representation, this study offers the first sustained analysis of the vital interrelationship between printed images and urban life in early modern London. The study differs from all other books on early modern British print culture in that it seeks out printed forms that were active in shaping and negotiating the urban milieu-prints that troubled categories of high and low culture, images that emerged when the political became infused with the creative, as well as prints that bear traces of the roles they performed and the ways they were used in the city. It is distinguished by its close and sustained readings of individual prints, from the likes of such artists as Wenceslaus Hollar, Francis Barlow, and William Faithorne; and this visual analysis is complemented with a thorough examination of the dynamics of print production as a commercial exchange that takes place within a wider set of exchanges (of goods, people, ideas and money) across the city and the nation. This study challenges scholars to re-imagine the function of popular prints as a highly responsive form of cultural production, capable not only of 'recording' events, spaces and social actions, but profoundly shaping the way these entities are conceived in the moment and also recast within cultural memory. It offers historians of print culture and British art a sophisticated and innovative model of how to mobilize rigorous archival research in the service of a thoroughly historicized and theorized analysis of visual representation and its relationship to space and social identity.
Joseph Monteyne is an Associate Professor in the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory at the University of British Columbia, Canada.
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