Ben Jonson was one of the most important writers of the English Renaissance, and this study both reflects and contributes to the growing focus on the concrete details of his art and career. By examining specific works, particular historical circumstances, and complex relations with various individuals, author Robert C. Evans tries to locate Jonson's writings in the contexts that helped shape their artistry.
This book presumes that the more one knows about Jonson's various contexts, the more richly one can appreciate the complicated significance of the texts he produced. In fact, a major purpose of the book is the presentation of new archival data. The individual chapters all assume that Jonson could not ignore his relations with other people and the effects that those relations might have had on his life and writings.
The first chapter raises explicitly many of the questions involved in the historical study of literature, contributing to recent dialogue about the meaning and value of the so-called New Historicism. This chapter also offers one of the few sustained examinations of one of Jonson's most typical and significant poems, the epistle to Edward Sackville.
Chapter 2 suggests why Jonson's relations with rivals and patrons were particularly significant. It discusses one of his most important rivalries - the "poetomachia" - and its significance for the early years of his life as a writer. The chapter then jumps to the end of Jonson's career and emphasizes works he addressed to the Earl of Newcastle, one of his most important later patrons. This initial emphasis on patronage and rivalry recurs in one way or another in all the subsequent chapters, which follow a roughly chronological scheme.
Chapter 3 looks at the earliest and perhaps still the best of Jonson's great plays, Volpone, and explores new evidence suggesting that Jonson may have used this comedy to mock a powerful and wellknown contemporary. Chapter 4 explores The Devil is an Ass (1616) and attempts to suggest the very complicated political and social circumstances in which it was enmeshed. Chapter 5 tries to show how the important masque entitled Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue offered a detailed response to another aristocratic entertainment written a few months earlier, and chapter 6 surveys the poet's apparently contentious relations with the highly talented Thomas Campion.
Chapters 7 and 8 focus on the closing years of Jonson's career. They explore his little-known friendship with Joseph Webbe, an important language theorist whose ideas were quite controversial at the time, and examine Jonson's relations with significant Caroline patrons in an attempt to show the complicated ways in which the patronage "system" - so often discussed in the abstract could operate in actuality. A brief afterword summarizes some of the general critical assumptions on which all the preceding chapters are based.
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Da: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condizione: Good. Torn/worn dj. Good hardcover with some shelfwear; may have previous owner's name inside. Standard-sized. Codice articolo mon0000285111
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Da: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Near fine cloth copy in a good if somewhat edge-nicked and dust-dulled dust-wrapper. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: xiv, 226 pages, 24 cm. Contents: 1. Jonson and Historical Criticism -- 2. Rivals and Patrons: Early and Late -- 3. Thomas Sutton: Jonson's Volpone? -- 4. Political Contexts of The Devil is an Ass -- 5. "Other Men's Provision": Jonson's Parody of Robert White in Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue -- 6. Jonson, Campion, and The Gypsies Metamorphos'd -- 7. Jonson, Joseph Webbe, and the Nature and Purpose of Poetry -- 8. Jonson, Weston, and the Digbys: Patronage Relations in Some Later Poems. Subjects: Jonson, Ben 1573?-1637 Criticism and interpretation. Literature and history England History 17th century. 1 Kg. Codice articolo 443885
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Da: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Irlanda
Near fine cloth copy in a good if somewhat edge-nicked and dust-dulled dust-wrapper. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: xiv, 226 pages, 24 cm. Contents: 1. Jonson and Historical Criticism -- 2. Rivals and Patrons: Early and Late -- 3. Thomas Sutton: Jonson's Volpone? -- 4. Political Contexts of The Devil is an Ass -- 5. "Other Men's Provision": Jonson's Parody of Robert White in Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue -- 6. Jonson, Campion, and The Gypsies Metamorphos'd -- 7. Jonson, Joseph Webbe, and the Nature and Purpose of Poetry -- 8. Jonson, Weston, and the Digbys: Patronage Relations in Some Later Poems. Subjects: Jonson, Ben 1573?-1637 Criticism and interpretation. Literature and history England History 17th century. 1 Kg. Codice articolo 443885
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