Although there has been a general revival of interest in Ben Jonson’s dramatic work in the past twenty years, little critical effort has been directed to his late plays—dismissed by John Dryden as the “dotages” of an aging mind. Through a close reading of The Devil Is an Ass, The Staple of News, The New Inn, and The Magnetic Lady in light of Jonson’s own theories of comedy, author Larry S. Champion demonstrates that they reveal the same precise construction and dramatic control found in his acclaimed masterpieces. Furthermore, these works reflect Jonson’s continued emphasis upon realism and satiric attack, though they may not be equal in quality or dramatic effectiveness. The brief and undistinguished stage runs of the late plays are not an...
The Self-Centred Art is a study of the plays of Ben Jonson and the actors who first performed in the...
Certain characteristics of King Lear can be accounted for in terms of the dramatic satire Jonson pio...
The volumes of English satiric verse of the late 1590s are generally presumed to heterogeneous colle...
Shakespeare has emerged as a dramatist who could make good use of his first-hand experience with act...
This thesis is a study of Ben Jonson's point of view. It attempts to determine that point of view by...
Ben Jonson’s Works, published in 1616, included all his comedies written that far, and meant an impo...
Bibliography: v. 1, p. xxvii.Introduction by Felix E. Schelling.--v. 1. Every man in his humour. (It...
There is no sustained study of Jonson\u27s attitudes toward masculinity and by extension, femininity...
There is no sustained study of Jonson\u27s attitudes toward masculinity and by extension, femininity...
The fundamental conflict between the dramatic theory of George Chapman and Ben Jonson centered aroun...
v. 1. Every man in his humour. Every man out of his humour. Cynthia's revels; or, the fountain of se...
The starting point of this article lies in the fact that among the later post-Shakespearean dramatis...
In the comical satires--Every Man Out of His Humor, Cynthia\u27s Revels, and Poetaster--Ben Jonson t...
Ben Jonson\u27s comedies seem to present an almost entirely negative view of women; the plays are fu...
This article investigates the cultural assumptions which underpin five twentieth and twenty-first ce...
The Self-Centred Art is a study of the plays of Ben Jonson and the actors who first performed in the...
Certain characteristics of King Lear can be accounted for in terms of the dramatic satire Jonson pio...
The volumes of English satiric verse of the late 1590s are generally presumed to heterogeneous colle...
Shakespeare has emerged as a dramatist who could make good use of his first-hand experience with act...
This thesis is a study of Ben Jonson's point of view. It attempts to determine that point of view by...
Ben Jonson’s Works, published in 1616, included all his comedies written that far, and meant an impo...
Bibliography: v. 1, p. xxvii.Introduction by Felix E. Schelling.--v. 1. Every man in his humour. (It...
There is no sustained study of Jonson\u27s attitudes toward masculinity and by extension, femininity...
There is no sustained study of Jonson\u27s attitudes toward masculinity and by extension, femininity...
The fundamental conflict between the dramatic theory of George Chapman and Ben Jonson centered aroun...
v. 1. Every man in his humour. Every man out of his humour. Cynthia's revels; or, the fountain of se...
The starting point of this article lies in the fact that among the later post-Shakespearean dramatis...
In the comical satires--Every Man Out of His Humor, Cynthia\u27s Revels, and Poetaster--Ben Jonson t...
Ben Jonson\u27s comedies seem to present an almost entirely negative view of women; the plays are fu...
This article investigates the cultural assumptions which underpin five twentieth and twenty-first ce...
The Self-Centred Art is a study of the plays of Ben Jonson and the actors who first performed in the...
Certain characteristics of King Lear can be accounted for in terms of the dramatic satire Jonson pio...
The volumes of English satiric verse of the late 1590s are generally presumed to heterogeneous colle...