Thesis ID: CBB001562731

Worldly Consumers: The Demand for Maps in Renaissance Italy (2011)

unapi

Carlton, Genevieve (Author)


Northwestern University


Publication Date: 2011
Physical Details: 274 pp.
Language: English

This study asks why sixteenth-century Italians chose to buy maps in the first decades after the cartographic revolution and concludes that maps became a central tool in the effort to impress one's neighbors. Just as family portraits were commissioned to emphasize desirable characteristics, maps became a short-hand way to show one's connection to a place or knowledge about the world. In this way, maps became a new form of cultural capital in the sixteenth century--owners consciously deployed maps to construct their identity through the selection and display of cartographic materials. These maps were flexible objects that could promote a family's power, a military career, trade connections, or show that one was an educated, modern and worldly person. "Worldly Consumers" examines the ways both producers and consumers negotiated the balance between the symbolic meaning attached to maps and the growing expectation that cartographic works accurately reflect the world. I challenge the widely-held perception that early modern maps were most important as tools of state imperialism by showing how individuals purchased and displayed maps as a deliberate act of self-fashioning, revealing that maps were valued not only for their geographical content but also for their ability to shape the public persona of their owner. These maps were not intended to be used for navigation, travel, or to feed imperial ambitions--rather, they were shown in the homes of worldly consumers who used maps to claim their place in a new culture of cosmopolitanism. My examination of the expanding market for maps as consumer goods utilizes a variety of sources, including maps, epigrams, dedications, household inventories, catalogues and advice manuals in order to reconstruct the value of sixteenth-century maps to their buyers. This method demonstrates how Renaissance Italians of all classes used material goods to craft a public identity, providing a unique perspective on individuals who often go unnoticed in history, like the Venetian woolworker Andrea Baretta who decorated his home with maps of Asia, Africa, Europe and America.

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Description Cited in ProQuest Diss. & Thes. : doc. no. 3456533.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001562731/

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Authors & Contributors
Luca Berardi
Zuber, Mike A.
Woodward, David
Török, Zsolt
Svatek, Petra
Seed, Patricia
Journals
Imago Mundi: A Review of Early Cartography
History in Africa
Early Science and Medicine: A Journal for the Study of Science, Technology and Medicine in the Pre-modern Period
Der Globusfreund: Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift für Globen- und Instrumentenkunde
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of Chicago Press
PUPS
Plus Ultra
Harvard University Press
Brepols
Concepts
Maps; atlases
Cartography
Geography
Cosmography
Globes
Humanism
People
Mercator, Gerardus
Ptolemy
Lazius, Wolfgang (1514-1565)
Visconte Maggiolo
Schöner, Johannes
Rosselli, Francesco di Lorenzo
Time Periods
16th century
Renaissance
15th century
17th century
Early modern
19th century
Places
Italy
Ottoman Empire
Europe
Guinea
Genoa (Italy)
Barcelona (Spain)
Institutions
Habsburg, House of
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