Among Marston's earliest works are two books of verse satires (Certaine Satyres and The Scourge of Villanie, both 1598) and three plays (Antonio and Mellida, Antonio's Revenge and What You Will, all between 1600-1602) in which he explored the composition of human identity. From the initial premiss that the self is socially constructed and tends always to be dependent on the social and material contexts in which it exists, he developed a conception of existential struggle, in which the individual self either succumbs to the influence of its environment, or else achieves an authentic autonomy by imposing its own reality on the world around it. The thesis is in five main parts. Chapter I reviews theories of identity in the sixteenth century, a...
Defined for the first time by Sir Thomas Elyot as a «secte of Phylosophers, whiche affirmed nothynge...
The aim of the thesis (Desperately) Seeking the Early Modern Self: The Self, Subjectivity, Modernit...
This note discusses two early manuscript comments in the copy of The Works of Mr John Marston (1633)...
This thesis investigates the use of the conventions of disguise and deception in three comedies of J...
John Marston’s literary legacy has inevitably existed in the larger-than-life shadows of his great c...
John Marston\u27s plays, often overlooked by post-structuralist criticism, provide an especially ric...
John Marston (c. 1576–1634) was a dramatist of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods, known for his s...
The formal satire of the late English Renaissance is a complex phenomenon, modelled upon the classic...
This paper is an attempt to see how the satirist in John Marston's works is characterized. First of ...
© 2014 Tee MontagueThe principal objective of this thesis is put forth evidence of John Marston's un...
Castigated for bitterness, John Marston's satire (1576-1634) is often equated with his masked Malcon...
This thesis is an examination of Histriomastix, Antonio and Mellida, Antonio's Revenge, Jacke Drum's...
In response to economic and social transformations of the period, early modern authors obsessively i...
This project shows how two early modern phenomena helped each other grow. The figure of the superior...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
Defined for the first time by Sir Thomas Elyot as a «secte of Phylosophers, whiche affirmed nothynge...
The aim of the thesis (Desperately) Seeking the Early Modern Self: The Self, Subjectivity, Modernit...
This note discusses two early manuscript comments in the copy of The Works of Mr John Marston (1633)...
This thesis investigates the use of the conventions of disguise and deception in three comedies of J...
John Marston’s literary legacy has inevitably existed in the larger-than-life shadows of his great c...
John Marston\u27s plays, often overlooked by post-structuralist criticism, provide an especially ric...
John Marston (c. 1576–1634) was a dramatist of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods, known for his s...
The formal satire of the late English Renaissance is a complex phenomenon, modelled upon the classic...
This paper is an attempt to see how the satirist in John Marston's works is characterized. First of ...
© 2014 Tee MontagueThe principal objective of this thesis is put forth evidence of John Marston's un...
Castigated for bitterness, John Marston's satire (1576-1634) is often equated with his masked Malcon...
This thesis is an examination of Histriomastix, Antonio and Mellida, Antonio's Revenge, Jacke Drum's...
In response to economic and social transformations of the period, early modern authors obsessively i...
This project shows how two early modern phenomena helped each other grow. The figure of the superior...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
Defined for the first time by Sir Thomas Elyot as a «secte of Phylosophers, whiche affirmed nothynge...
The aim of the thesis (Desperately) Seeking the Early Modern Self: The Self, Subjectivity, Modernit...
This note discusses two early manuscript comments in the copy of The Works of Mr John Marston (1633)...