Alchemist and other plays
Material type: TextSeries: Oxford World's ClassicsPublication details: New York Oxford University Press 1998Description: xxviii,530pISBN: 0192834460Subject(s): English Literature | English Drama | Politics and literature | Theatre | United States | Jonson, Ben, 1573?-1637DDC classification: 822.3 Summary: Benjamin Jonson was a Renaissance dramatist, poet, and actor, known best for his satirical plays and lyric poems. Jonson focused on creating works that implemented elements of the realistic as well as the absurd. Jonson's most performed play, and the one that sparked a period of great success for the playwright, is "Volpone, or The Fox". Volpone, a Venetian con artist, is feigning to be on his death bed, pitting several aspirant heirs against one another. The dark comedy is as much serious as it is amusing, exposing the audience to greedy, corrupt characters that at first seem absurdly fictional, but who ultimately reveal a number of societal flaws. Also included in the is collection are "The Alchemist", a comedy which relates the fraudulent enterprise of a butler when left in charge of his master's house who has fled to the country during an outbreak of the plague; "The Epicoene", which concerns the farcical scheme of Dauphine to get his inheritance from his uncle; and "Bartholomew Fair", the comedic tale of a plot to win the widow Dame Purecraft from the hypocritical Puritan Zeal-of-the-Land Busy. All together this collection presents Jonson's most admired and often performed works.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 822.3 JON/A (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 07799 |
Volpone, or The Fox Epicene, or The Silent Woman
The Alchemist
Bartholomew Fair
Benjamin Jonson was a Renaissance dramatist, poet, and actor, known best for his satirical plays and lyric poems. Jonson focused on creating works that implemented elements of the realistic as well as the absurd. Jonson's most performed play, and the one that sparked a period of great success for the playwright, is "Volpone, or The Fox". Volpone, a Venetian con artist, is feigning to be on his death bed, pitting several aspirant heirs against one another. The dark comedy is as much serious as it is amusing, exposing the audience to greedy, corrupt characters that at first seem absurdly fictional, but who ultimately reveal a number of societal flaws. Also included in the is collection are "The Alchemist", a comedy which relates the fraudulent enterprise of a butler when left in charge of his master's house who has fled to the country during an outbreak of the plague; "The Epicoene", which concerns the farcical scheme of Dauphine to get his inheritance from his uncle; and "Bartholomew Fair", the comedic tale of a plot to win the widow Dame Purecraft from the hypocritical Puritan Zeal-of-the-Land Busy. All together this collection presents Jonson's most admired and often performed works.
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