The social relations of Jonson's theater

Bibliographic Information

The social relations of Jonson's theater

Jonathan Haynes

Cambridge University Press, 2010, c1992

  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The author considers the Elizabethan playwright Ben Jonson a realist and an acute observer of the transformation from feudalism to capitalism. Many of the forms and purposes of Jonson's realism resulted from the social dynamics of the London theater audience. In this book, Haynes presents a detailed literary historical argument about the sources and consequences of Jonson's realism. He examines the entanglements of life and art in Jonson's time both through a look at the life of that period and through insightful readings of Jonson's plays. The book polemicizes against the moral and formal pre-occupations of the last two generations of Jonson criticism proceeding it; it is instead informed by the social history and by the sociology of Pierre Bordieu and Norbert Elias.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements
  • 1. Introduction: Jonson's realism
  • 2. The origins of Jonson's realism
  • 3. 'Thus neere, and familiarly allied to the time'
  • 4. Representing the Underworld: The Alchemist
  • 5. Festivity and the dramatic economy of Bartholomew Fair
  • Index.

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