World Literature
- 983
- WzDD's HSC Info Page
- Donne's The Apparition, The Flea, A Valediction Forbidding Mourning and other poems. Analysis of the poems.
- 984
- "But Worth pretends": Discovering Jonsonian Masque in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
- Anita M. Hagerman analyzes "Wroth's connections to Ben Jonson and the possibilities the connections offer regarding both the form and content of Wroth's sonnet sequence Pamphilia to Amphilanthus."
- 985
- "On the Famous Voyage": Ben Jonson and Civic Space
- Essay by Andrew McRae from Early Modern Literary Studies (September 1998).
- 986
- (Self)-Fashioning of Ezekiel Edgworth in Jonson's Bartholomew Fair, The
- Essay by Jean MacIntyre from Early Modern Literary Studies 4:3 (January 1999).
- 987
- Ben Jonson Unmasked
- An essay by Kathleen A. Prendergrast on Jonson's changing attitudes towards his fellow playwrights, the theater as a medium, and his own role as a dramatist.
- 988
- Ben Jonson and Cervantes
- Yumiko Yamada suggests that while many studies of Cervantes make connections to Shakespeare, the connection to Jonson deserves more critical attention.
- 990
- Book Review
- Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson and Theatre: Performance, Practice and Theory, by Richard Cave, et al.
- 992
- Book Review
- Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson's Antimasques: A history of growth and decline, by Lesley Mickel.
- 993
- Book Reviews
- Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson, Every Man in His Humour and Every Man Out of His Humour, Ed. Helen Ostovich.
- 994
- Jonson's Romish Foxe
- Alizon Brunning argues that Volpone "can also be read as an overtly Anti-Catholic discourse."
- 995
- Jonson's Stoic Politics: Lipsius, the Greeks, and the "Speach According to Horace"
- Robert C. Evans suggests comparisons between Lipsius and Jonson, for "[b]oth men seem to have equated good politics with moral goodness: the just ruler, the worthy citizen, and the ideal commonwealth should all be rooted in virtue."
- 996
- Marking his Place: Ben Jonson's Punctuation
- Sara van den Berg suggests that "[t]o investigate his punctuation is to investigate not only his specific practices but, even more importantly, his theory of the text."
- 997
- The Swinburne Project
- A study of Ben Jonson: comedies, tragedies, masques, miscellaneous works, and discoveries.
