Rome
 


Rome

A City Out of Print

Rose Marie San Juan

Rome

$48.00 Cloth/jacket
ISBN: 0-8166-3791-1
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-3791-1

 

An intriguing look at what printed materials tell us about daily life and public space in seventeenth-century Rome.

Focusing on images and descriptions of movement and spectacle—everyday street activities, congregations in market piazzas, life in the Jewish ghetto and the plague hospital, papal and other ceremonial processions, public punishment, and pilgrimage routes—Rose Marie San Juan uncovers the social tensions and conflicts within seventeenth century Roman society that are both concealed within and prompted by mass-produced representations of the city. These depictions of Rome—guidebooks, street posters, broadsheets and brochures, topographic and thematic maps, city views, and collectible images of landmarks and other famous sights—redefined the ways in which public space was experienced, controlled, and utilized, encouraging tourists, pilgrims, and penitents while constraining the activities and movements of women, merchants, dissidents, and Jews.

San Juan contends that the representations of urban space afforded by new print technologies were appropriated by a wide variety of people in the city for purposes that ranged from regulation to opposition. A sophisticated analysis of the contested relations between people, print culture, and urban modernity, Rome: A City Out of Print also offers a rich portrait of the life of the street and the city.

“Rome is full of fascinating detail and interpretative insight. Combining an art historian’s skills with a powerful grasp of spatial and cultural theory, San Juan explores seven ‘moments’ of urban life in mid-17th century Rome.” —Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

“San Juan offers an extraordinary range of textual and visual materials to provide the theoretical scaffolding for a new reading of Rome as a city made ‘out of print.’” —Renaissance Quarterly

“Trying to get one’s bearing in the seventeenth-century city meant being confronted with a range of documents. Professor San Juan relies on a wealth of archival materials—from bandi (printed street ordinances) to pilgrimage guides—that are often overlooked. San Juan has given those of us who spend considerable time trying to see the eternal city in its early modern manifestations a lot more to see.” —Sixteenth Century Journal

Rose Marie San Juan is associate professor in the Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory at the University of British Columbia.

400 pages | 81 halftones | 7 x 10 | 2001