"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."
"On the Famous Voyage": Ben Jonson and Civic Space: Essay by Andrew McRae from Early Modern Literary Studies (September 1998).
"The strangest pageant, fashion'd like a court": John Donne and Ben Jonson to 1600 -- Parallel Lives: William F. Blissett suggests that a Jonson reference to a "Dr. Done . . . encourages a consideration of the parallel literary lives of Jonson and Donne."
(Self)-Fashioning of Ezekiel Edgworth in Jonson's Bartholomew Fair, The: Essay by Jean MacIntyre from Early Modern Literary Studies 4:3 (January 1999).
Antitheatricalism in Light of Ben Jonson's Volpone: Joel Culpepper traces Volpone's role in the Puritan battle to end crossdressing in theatrical productions.
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.
Ben Jonson and His Folio: Critical analysis of several book chapters on Jonson.
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.
Ben Jonson, from The Sad Shepherd: or, A Tale of Robin-Hood (1641): Short background on Jonson's last play, excerpt, and notes.
Book Review: Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson's Antimasques: A history of growth and decline, by Lesley Mickel.
Book Review: Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson and Theatre: Performance, Practice and Theory, by Richard Cave, et al.
Book Review: Robert C. Evans reviews Ben Jonson: Poetry and Architecture, by A.W. Johnson.
Book Reviews: Matthew Steggle reviews Ben Jonson, Every Man in His Humour and Every Man Out of His Humour, Ed. Helen Ostovich.
Jonson's Romish Foxe: Alizon Brunning argues that Volpone "can also be read as an overtly Anti-Catholic discourse."
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."
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."
Moulton's Library of Literary Criticism -- Ben Jonson: Extracted analytical quotes about Jonson and his works.
The Swinburne Project: A study of Ben Jonson: comedies, tragedies, masques, miscellaneous works, and discoveries.
Theater Review: David Nicol reviews Eastward Ho!