SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023
Janelle Jenstad and Co-Applicants Martin Holmes and Mark Kaethler were awarded a SSHRC Insight Grant for 2018-2023 for a new project called
Walking Texts in Early Modern London.The links below will take you to pages explaining more about our team and setting out our plans for the two key parts of the project.
Summary from Fall 2017 SSHRC Insight Grant Application
John Stow’s Survey and the mayoral shows articulate a shared vision of London, sanctioned by its oligarchy and written on
the streetscape. Stow and his literary successors traced the boundaries of the 26
wards in words. They guide readers imaginatively along the streets of London, lingering
like good tour guides at locations of historical interest and traversing the past
below street level. The peripatetic mayoral shows were performed annually in those same streets; as the new mayor returned from Westminster with his entourage, he became the main actor and principal audience for exhortations,
spectacle, and reenacted history that idealized the relationship between the mayor,
the city, and the people. Although the Survey is perambulatory chorography and the shows are semi-dramatic narrative, both were
sponsored by London’s twelve great livery companies, dedicated to London’s mayors, given as gifts to the same readers, and written by
a group of poets, playwrights, and historians who knew each other and mined each other’s
historiographies. Our team sees both Survey and shows as
official walking textsin that they name and historicize the spaces and places of London in similar ways. Our project will make clear the mutual aims of these distinct genres by recreating—in MoEML’s richly linked digital space—the robust network of intertextual references created by these cultural productions.
We will:
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Prepare a dynamic digital anthology of the 4 editions of the Survey and 32 extant pageant books.
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Tag and geolocate all the placenames, places of performance, and implied movements in the Survey and the books.
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Situate the Survey and shows in the critical, documentary, and historical contexts necessary to understand their mutual interdependence and platial significance.
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Optimize the texts for computational analysis so that we can version the four editions of the Survey and partition the shows into the individual place-based pageants.
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Prototype a new type of edition: the
polychronic peripatetic edition
thatbreaks the book
and attaches texts, data, and digital artifacts to routes and points on a map.
Our project vastly increases the literary accessibility and historiographical value
of the Survey and shows for students, scholars, and historians. We will produce the first scholarly
paratexts for Stow’s 1598 Survey, the first digital-critical edition of the 1603 edition, and the first ever editions
of 1618 and 1633. We will publish the first scholarly editions of many of the pageant
books, the first complete anthology of all mayoral shows, and, in 24 cases, the first
modern-spelling editions. We will make the 1598, 1618, and 1633 texts of the Survey as readily available for research and teaching as the 1603 final, authorial text.
We will make the eyewitness accounts of the show and the contextual records of their
making as accessible as the printed pageant books. We will link the Survey to its sources collected in the Stow’s Books project. Tracing the full extent of the borrowings and allusions between these texts will
reveal how these documents work in tandem to imbue London place names with significance,
cultivate an ongoing secular identity for the city through historiography and shared
narratives, and use print to write this civic identity in peripatetic fashion. These
expanding, collaboratively written, palimpsestic walks, where footprints and words
trace the same route with incremental variations and memorial accretions, afford opportunities
to study collaboration, adaptation, and narrative form. Full awareness of their rhetorical
techniques and writing of place will help us mine these histories more carefully when
we use them to understand London’s changing demographics and infrastructure.
Cite this page
MLA citation
SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023.The Map of Early Modern London, edited by , U of Victoria, 20 Jun. 2018, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm.
Chicago citation
SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 20, 2018. http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm.
2018. SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Jenstad, Janelle ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023 T2 - The Map of Early Modern London PY - 2018 DA - 2018/06/20 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/SSHRC2018.xml ER -
RefWorks
RT Web Page SR Electronic(1) A1 Jenstad, Janelle A6 Jenstad, Janelle T1 SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023 T2 The Map of Early Modern London WP 2018 FD 2018/06/20 RD 2018/06/20 PP Victoria PB University of Victoria LA English OL English LK http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#JENS1"><surname>Jenstad</surname>, <forename>Janelle</forename></name></author>. <title level="a">SSHRC Insight Grant 2018-2023</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2018-06-20">20 Jun. 2018</date>, <ref target="http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SSHRC2018.htm</ref>.</bibl>Personography
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Kate LeBere
KL
Research Assistant, 2018 to present. Kate LeBere is a honours student in the Department of History at the University of Victoria. Her areas of focus are 16th and 17th century Britain, and 20th century Canada.Roles played in the project
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad, associate professor in the department of English at the University of Victoria, is the general editor and coordinator of The Map of Early Modern London. She is also the assistant coordinating editor of Internet Shakespeare Editions. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), and Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, forthcoming). She is currently working on an edition of The Merchant of Venice for ISE and Broadview P. She lectures regularly on London studies, digital humanities, and on Shakespeare in performance.Roles played in the project
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Mark Kaethler
MK
Mark Kaethler, full-time instructor at Medicine Hat College (Medicine Hat, Alberta), is the assistant project director of mayoral shows for the Map of Early Modern London (MoEML). Mark received his PhD from the University of Guelph in 2016; his dissertation focused on Jacobean politics and irony in the works of Thomas Middleton, including Middleton’s mayoral show The Triumphs of Truth. His work on politics and civic pageantry has appeared in the peer-reviewed journals Upstart and This Rough Magic, and he is currently finishing work on Thomas Dekker’s lord mayor’s show London’s Tempe for MoEML. He is the co-editor with Janelle Jenstad and Jennifer Roberts-Smith of a forthcoming volume of essays entitled Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media: Old Words, New Tools (Routledge, 2017) and is co-authoring a piece on creating the digital anthology of mayoral shows with Jenstad for a forthcoming collection of essays on early modern civic pageantry. The mayoral shows project affords Mark the opportunity to share his research skills in governance, civic communities, urban navigation, bibliographical studies, and the digital humanities with MoEML.Roles played in the project
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Assistant Project Director, Mayoral Shows
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Mark Kaethler is mentioned in the following documents:
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Joey Takeda
JT
Programmer, 2018-present; Junior Programmer, 2015 to 2017; Research Assistant, 2014 to 2017. Joey Takeda is an MA student at the University of British Columbia in the Department of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA honours in English (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria in 2016. His primary research interests include diasporic and indigenous Canadian and American literature, critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Katie Tanigawa
KT
Katie Tanigawa is a doctoral candidate at the University of Victoria. Her dissertation focuses on representations of poverty in Irish modernist literature. Her additional research interests include geospatial analyses of modernist texts and digital humanities approaches to teaching and analyzing literature.Roles played in the project
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Martin D. Holmes
MDH
Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC). Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the project and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was a co-applicant on MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.Roles played in the project
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John Stow is mentioned in the following documents:
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Westminster is mentioned in the following documents: