"Mapping Space, Sense, and Movement in Florence" explores the potential of digital mapping or Historical GIS as a research and teaching tool to enable researchers and students to uncover the spatial, kinetic and sensory dimensions of the early modern city.
The exploration focuses on new digital research and mapping projects that engage the rich social, cultural, and artistic life of Florence in particular. One is a new GIS tool known as DECIMA, (Digitally-Encoded Census Information and Mapping Archive), and the other is a smartphone app called Hidden Florence. The international collaborators who have helped build these and other projects address three questions: how such projects can be created when there are typically fewer sources than for modern cities; how they facilitate more collaborative models for historical research into social relations, senses, and emotions; and how they help us interrogate older historical interpretations and create new models of analysis and communication. Four authors examine technical issues around the software programs and manuscripts. Five then describe how GIS can be used to advance and develop existing research projects. Finally, four authors look to the future and consider how digital mapping transforms the communication of research results, and makes it possible to envision new directions in research.
This exciting new volume is illustrated throughout with maps, screenshots and diagrams to show the projects at work. It will be essential reading for students and scholars of early modern Italy, the Renaissance and digital humanities.
Author(s): Nicholas Terpstra, Colin Rose (eds.)
Series: Routledge Research in Digital Humanities
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: XVI+220
List of figures vii
List of tables x
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations xiii
List of contributors xiv
Introduction / NICHOLAS TERPSTRA 1
PART 1. Creating a historical GIS project 13
1. Thinking and using DECIMA: neighbourhoods and occupations in Renaissance Florence / COLIN ROSE 15
2. The route of governmentality: surveying and collecting urban space in ducal Florence / LEAH FAIBISOFF 33
3. From the Decima to DECIMA and back again: the data behind the data / EDUARDO FABBRO 53
4. Shaping the streetscape: institutions as landlords in early modern Florence / DANIEL JAMISON 63
PART 2. Using digital mapping to unlock spatial and social relations 85
5. Women behind walls: tracking nuns and socio-spatial networks in sixteenth-century Florence / SHARON STROCCHIA AND JULIA ROMBOUGH 87
6. Locating the sex trade in the early modern city: space, sense, and regulation in sixteenth-century Florence / NICHOLAS TERPSTRA 107
7. Plague and the city: methodological considerations in mapping disease in early modern Florence / JOHN HENDERSON AND COLIN ROSE 125
PART 3. Mapping motion, emotion, and sense: using digital mapping to rethink categories and communication 147
8. Seeing sound: mapping the Florentine soundscape / NIALL ATKINSON 149
9. Mapping fear: plague and perception in Florence and Tuscany / NICHOLAS A. ECKSTEIN 169
10. Locating experience in the Renaissance city using mobile app technologies: the Hidden Florence project / FABRIZIO NEVOLA AND DAVID ROSENTHAL 187
Conclusion: towards early modern spatial humanities / NICHOLAS TERPSTRA AND COLIN ROSE 210
Index 217