This essay is focused on two samples of city comedy put on stage in the same year (1605), Eastward Ho!, written in collaboration by Ben Jonson, George Chapman, and John Marston, and A Trick to Catch the Old One, by Thomas Middleton. According to my reading, these two plays, by calling in question the traditional moral of the genre, reflect the cultural crisis and the ideological turmoils following the rise of the new mercantile economy. In Eastward Ho!, the final symbolic order is still based on moral values, but these values have now become part of the market sphere. In Middleton’s play, on the contrary, the final symbolic order is amoral, entirely compromised with the acquisitive logic, which means the impossibility of distinguishing bet...
That revenues, profits, wealth, valuables, properties and various forms of riches can be so attracti...
The Merchant of Venice explores usury and the violation of hospitality’s codes in a world where hosp...
This thesis attempts a definition of comedy by analyzing the comedies of Molière and Goldoni. Althou...
This essay is focused on two samples of city comedy put on stage in the same year (1605), Eastward H...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice is typically identified in scholarship as a comedy. How...
This thesis explores the legacy of the iconographic and rhetorical conventions of late medieval pers...
This thesis discusses one of Shakespeare’s most obscure plays, The Life of Timon of Athens, a play w...
This paper considers the protocapitalist social climate in early modern London, examining three earl...
This essay maps three fundamental features of the Renaissance theater as a theater of appropriation....
This article questions the orthodox reading of early English city comedies that such plays exhibit i...
This essay is intended as a philological annotation on the anthropological plot that underlies the s...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
As a contribution to the discussion of Shakespeare’s “appropriability” (Stanley Cavell), this paper ...
That revenues, profits, wealth, valuables, properties and various forms of riches can be so attracti...
The Merchant of Venice explores usury and the violation of hospitality’s codes in a world where hosp...
This thesis attempts a definition of comedy by analyzing the comedies of Molière and Goldoni. Althou...
This essay is focused on two samples of city comedy put on stage in the same year (1605), Eastward H...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice is typically identified in scholarship as a comedy. How...
This thesis explores the legacy of the iconographic and rhetorical conventions of late medieval pers...
This thesis discusses one of Shakespeare’s most obscure plays, The Life of Timon of Athens, a play w...
This paper considers the protocapitalist social climate in early modern London, examining three earl...
This essay maps three fundamental features of the Renaissance theater as a theater of appropriation....
This article questions the orthodox reading of early English city comedies that such plays exhibit i...
This essay is intended as a philological annotation on the anthropological plot that underlies the s...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
As a contribution to the discussion of Shakespeare’s “appropriability” (Stanley Cavell), this paper ...
That revenues, profits, wealth, valuables, properties and various forms of riches can be so attracti...
The Merchant of Venice explores usury and the violation of hospitality’s codes in a world where hosp...
This thesis attempts a definition of comedy by analyzing the comedies of Molière and Goldoni. Althou...