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Ben Jonson

Ben Jonson. Group Two. Ben Jonson 1572-1637. ● Ben Jonson was the posthumous son of a London clergyman, he was educated at Westminister School under the great antiquarian scholar William Camden. There he developed his love of classical

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Ben Jonson

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  1. Ben Jonson Group Two

  2. Ben Jonson 1572-1637

  3. ● Ben Jonson was the posthumous son of a London clergyman, he was educated at Westminister School under the great antiquarian scholar William Camden. There he developed his love of classical learing, but lacking the resources to continue his education, Jonson was forced to turn to his stepfather’s trade of brcklaying, a life he not endure.

  4. ● He escaped by joining the English forces in Flanders, where , as he later boasted , he killed a man in single combat before the eyes of two armies. ● Back in London, his attempt to make a living as an actor and playwright almost ended in early disaster. He was imprisoned in 1597 for collaborating with Thomas Nashe on the scandalous play The Isle of Dogs(now lost) and shortly after release he killed one of his fellow actor in duel.

  5. ●Jonson escaped the gallows by pleading benefit of clergy. His learning had saved his life. Under the influence of a priest imprisoned with him, he had converted to Catholicism (around the time that John Donne was abandoning that faith). Jonson was now more than ever a marginal figure, distrusted by the society that he satirized brilliantly in his early plays.

  6. ●In 1603 he was called before the PrivyCouncil to answer charges of “popery and treason” found in his play Sejanus. Little more than a year later he was in jail again for his play Eastward Ho, which openly mocked the king’s Scots accent and propensity for selling knighthoods; Yet Jonson was now on the way to establishing himself at the new court. In 1605 he received the commission to organize the Twelfth Night entertainment. In the same years that he was writing the masques he produced his greatest works for the public theater .

  7. His first successful play, Every Man in His Humor, had inaugurated the so-called comedy of humors, which ridicules the eccentricities or passion of the characters( thought to be caused by physiological imbalance). He capitalized on this success with the comedies Volpone(1606), Epicene(1609), The Alchemist(1601), and Bartholomew(1614). Jonson preserved the detached, satiric perspective of an Outsider.

  8. ● Although he rose to a position of eminent respectability, Jonson seems to have been possessed all his life by a quarrelsome siprit. Much of his best work emerged out of fierece tensions with collaborators and contemporaries. ●In spite of his antagonistic nature, Jonson had a great capacity for friendship. His friends included Shakespeare, Donne, Francis Bacon, and John Selden. ●After a stroke in 1629 left him partially paralyzed and confined to his home , Jonson continued to write for the stage, and was at work on a new play when died in 1637.

  9. The masque of Blackness • It was an political entertainment presided over the development by James I and Queen Anne in 1603 • It idealized the Stuart court as the embodiment of all perfection. • Blackness established Jonson and his rival, Inigo Jones, as the chief makers of court masques for more than two decades.

  10. Court masques usually were performed only once-most often on Twelfth Night or some times for a wedding or other special occasion and were followed by an elaborate feast and all-night dancing. • Blackness began the tradition of prodigiously expensive masque. • These evenings were usually chaotic.

  11. Court masques differed from performances in public theater in most respects. • The masques combined songs, speeches, richly ornamented costumes, masks….(see p1326) • They were presented to King James.

  12. Blackness asserts the cultural superiority of the English over non-European peoples and celebrates the patriarchal power of James. • The ladies in the Blackness appeared as black African beauties. • Their costumes designed by Inigo Jones conjoin exotic beauty and wildness, associating them with the feared and desired “others” discovered by contemporary explorers.

  13. Some viewers regarded the work unsettling, one deeming the ladies’ apparel “too light and courtesan-like ” and their black faces and hands “a very loathsome sight”

  14. In many later Jacobean masques the glorification of the monarch seems less conflict. • Jonson developed antimasque, in which wicked, disruptive or rustic characters played by professional actors. • They then enact the mixture of the ideal and the real as they unmask.

  15. From early to late, many masques contain features that subtly resist the politics of Stuart absolutism.

  16. Volpone • This dark satire on human rapacity is set in Venice, but its true target is the city of London, or the city that , Jonson feared, London was about to become. • Venice is a place devoted to commerce and mired in corruption, populated by greedy fools and conniving rascals.

  17. Volpone combines elements from several sources: • 1.the classical satirist Lucian • 2.Roman comedy • 3.the Italian commedia dell’ arte • 4. some ancient and medieval beast fables • *But Volpone is much more than the sum of its borrowings. It is a work of enormous comic energy and full of black homor.

  18. Volpone was first performed at the Globe Theater in the spring of 1606. • Its audiences include some aristocrats, prosperous citizens, lower-class groundlings and some learned people at Oxford and Cambridge, to whom Jonson dedicated the printed edition of Volpone. • It was first published in quarto form in 1607 and republished with a few changes in the 1616 Works, the basis for the present text.

  19. Primary characters of Volpone • Volpone: fox-deceiver • Mosca: fly-parasite • Volture: vulture-scavenger/lawyer • Corbaccio: crow-wealthy but still a greedy man • Corvino: raven-scavenger, the wealthy merchant

  20. Celia: Corvino’s wife • Bonario: Corbaccio’s son • Nano: a dwarf • Castrone: an eunuch • Androgyno: a hermaphrodite, Volpone’s courtier • Peregrine: the young English man • Avocatori: lawyer, Corvino’s brother

  21. Summary • Volpone, wealthy and childless, is a con artist who attracts legacy hunters by pretending to be on the verge of death. • Volpone’s “clients” – including Corvino, Corbaccio, Voltore, and Lady Would-be Politic – bring him presents in the hopes of being included in his will. • Volpone literally worships his gold while his servant Mosca, often called his Parasite, flits around and periodically interrupts him with flattery.

  22. Voltore, a lawyer, brings an antique plate and is told he will be Volpone’s sole heir. • Corbaccio and Corvino enter in succession, bringing a bag of gold coins and a pearl, respectively, and are also told that they will be heir to Volpone’s fortune. • Mosca is responsible for their deception, including Corbaccio’s false belief that disinheriting his son Bonario will eventually pay dividends. • Mosca describes the beauty of Corvino’s wife Celia to Volpone, who decides he must see her for himself. They agree to go to her house in disguise.

  23. Sir Politic Would-be and Peregrine are seen in the public square outside Corvino’s house. They discuss a series of rumors. Mosca and Nano interrupt their discussion. • Volpone, disguised as a mountebank, delivers a sales pitch for an elixir. When he asks for a handkerchief from the audience, Celia throws hers down to him. Corvino enters and furiously disperses the crowd. • Back at his house, Volpone swoons for Celia. He gives Mosca permission to use his fortune in whatever way is necessary to pursue Celia.

  24. At Corvino’s house, Corvino sharply reprimands Celia for showing favor to a mountebank. He brandishes his sword and threatens her with physical violence before Mosca knocks on the door. • Mosca tells Corvino that Volpone is on the mend but is in need of a female companion to maintain his health. After due consideration, Corvino offers Celia and goes to tell her to prepare for a feast at Volpone’s house.

  25. Bonario enters and scorns Mosca, who breaks down crying. Mosca then tells Bonario that Corbaccio plans to disinherit Bonario. Mosca offers to bring Bonario hear it for himself. • Back at Volpone’s house, the entertainment provided by Nano, Castrone, and Androgyno is interrupted by the entrance of Lady Would-be, who talks Volpone’s ear off and brings him a cap she made herself. • Mosca enters and dispatches with her by telling her he saw her husband Sir Politic on a gondola with another woman.

  26. Mosca hides Bonario so that he may witness the conversation with Corbaccio. However, Corvino and Celia arrive early and Mosca is forced to move Bonario to the gallery. • After considerable deliberation, Celia is forced to be alone with Volpone, who reveals to her that he is not actually sick. Volpone offers her his fortune, but she declines. Just as he begins to force himself on her, Bonario leaps out and rescues Celia, exiting through the window.

  27. Mosca, who has been wounded by Bonario, enters and attends to Volpone. He then convinces Corbaccio and Voltore to go after Bonario. • At this time, Sir Politic and Peregrine discuss the ways of a gentleman. Sir Politic details his get-rich-quick plans, one of which involves selling the Venetian state to the Turks. • Lady Would-be enters and accuses Peregrine of being a woman who is seducing her husband.

  28. Mosca enters and convinces Lady Would-be that her husband’s seducer is actually Celia. Though Lady Would-be apologizes to him, Peregrine vows revenge on Sir Politic for his humiliation. • Though they side with Bonario and Celia at the opening of the case, the Avocatori eventually align themselves with Voltore, who argues that Bonario committed adultery with Celia and attempted to kill his father. Lady Would-be testifies that Celia seduced her husband.

  29. Bonario and Celia have no witnesses of their own, so they lose the case. • Volpone complains that, during the court case, he began to feel the pains which he has been faking for so long. He downs a glass of wine to “shake it off” (5.1.8) and Mosca enters to celebrate their unsurpassable masterpiece. • Mosca goads Volpone to begin cozening his “clients,” so Volpone writes a will naming Mosca as heir and spreads the word that he is dead.

  30. When Volpone’s “clients” enter and discover that they have been duped, Mosca berates them one by one as Volpone looks on from behind the curtain. They decide to disguise themselves and continue tormenting the “clients” in the street. • At Sir Politic’s house, Peregrine plays a practical joke on Sir Politic. Pretending to be a messenger, Peregrine tells Sir Politic that he has been reported for his plan to sell Venice to the Turks. • Sir Politic panics, instructs his servants to burn his notes, and hides under a large tortoise shell just as three merchants, dressed as statesman, enter the house.

  31. Once the merchants discover Sir Politic under the shell, Peregrine tells him they are even and leaves. Sir Politic decides to leave Venice forever since his reputation has been so damaged. • In the street, Volpone, disguised as a commendatore, torments Corbaccio, Corvino, and Voltore by pretending he has heard news that they inherited a fortune.

  32. Voltore cracks and goes to the Scrutineo to confess that he lied during the previous court case. He gives his notes to the Avocatori but when Volpone, still disguised, tells him that Volpone is still alive, Voltore retracts his confession and pretends he was possessed while making it. • While debating over whether to turn himself in, Volpone discovers that Mosca has locked him out of his own house. After being called by the Avocatori, Mosca arrives at the Scrutineo and confirms that Volpone is dead. • Volpone begges him to say that Volpone is still alive, but Mosca wants half of his fortune.

  33. When Mosca and Volpone cannot agree to share the fortune, Volpone is arrested by officers of the court. • Before he is led away, however, Volpone unmasks himself and brings Mosca down with him. • The Avocatori then hand down punishments to Volpone, Mosca, and the rest of the “clients.” To conclude the play, Volpone speaks to the audience and asks for applause.

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