Ben Jonson RevisedTwayne Publishers, 1999 - 293 من الصفحات The essays here, selected with that in mind, offer detailed readings of all the major plays, Sejanus, Volpone, Epicene, The Alchemist and Bartholomew Fair as well as the poems and later plays only recently recovered as genuinely engaging pieces for the stage. Collectively they demonstrate why interest in Jonson is higher today than at any time since his death."--BOOK JACKET. |
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الصفحة 33
... plotting , characterization , and diction . Its two plot lines , drawn from different Plautine comedies , double the instances of long- lost children ultimately restored to their families and multiply the love interests and eventual ...
... plotting , characterization , and diction . Its two plot lines , drawn from different Plautine comedies , double the instances of long- lost children ultimately restored to their families and multiply the love interests and eventual ...
الصفحة 37
... plotting . In Every Man in His Humour , Jonson avoids that pitfall . Once the various parts of the plot are set in motion , specific incidents give the impression of flowing naturally from unpremeditated occasions . For instance ...
... plotting . In Every Man in His Humour , Jonson avoids that pitfall . Once the various parts of the plot are set in motion , specific incidents give the impression of flowing naturally from unpremeditated occasions . For instance ...
الصفحة 47
... plot and if it were not presented with such comic zest , it might be bleak indeed . But Jonson not only presents the main plot with inventiveness and energy but also deftly weaves into its fabric a subplot that is a comedy of manners in ...
... plot and if it were not presented with such comic zest , it might be bleak indeed . But Jonson not only presents the main plot with inventiveness and energy but also deftly weaves into its fabric a subplot that is a comedy of manners in ...
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achievement action actually appearance attempt become Ben Jonson Catiline celebration characters cited in text classical collection comedy comic complex concern contrast court critical death desire Discoveries drama early effect Elizabethan England English English Studies Epigrams expressed Face fact Fair father final foolish gives grace hereafter cited human Humour ideal important individual James John Jonson King Lady language learned less lines Literary Literature live London lyric masque master means moral Moreover nature never notes observes original play play's plot poem poet poet's poetry political position praise present Press Queen readers reality reflects relationship religious Renaissance reveals role Roman satire Sejanus serious Shakespeare social society stage Studies suggest tion tragedies true University University Press values verse virtue vision Volpone whole women writing young