· Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599...

7
Elizabethan and Restoration Literature By Moazzam Ali Famous Elizabethan Authors and Works 1588 Greene's Pandosto 1588 Christopher Marlowe's Dr. Faustus 1590 Spenser's Faerie Queen (1-3) 1590 Marlowe's The Jew of Malta 1591 Sidney's Astrophil and Stella 1592 Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy 1592 William Shakespeare's Henry VI Part I 1592 William Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part II 1593 William Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part III 1594 Greene's Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay 1594 Marlowe's Edward II 1594 William Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus 1594 William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors 1594 William Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew 1594 William Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Two Gentlemen of Verona 1594 William Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost 1595 Sidney's An Apologia for Poetrie 1595 William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet 1595 William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream 1596 William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice 1596 Spenser's Faerie Queen (4-6) 1597 William Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part I 1597 William Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part II 1598 William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing 1598 William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar 1600 Kemp's Nine Daies Wonder 1600 Dekker's Shoemaker's Holiday 1600 Jonson Cynthia's Revels 1601 William Shakespeare's Richard II 1601 Jonson Poetaster 1600 William Shakespeare's Richard III

Transcript of · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599...

Page 1: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

Elizabethan and Restoration Literature

By Moazzam Ali

Famous Elizabethan Authors and Works

1588 Greene's Pandosto1588 Christopher Marlowe's Dr. Faustus1590 Spenser's Faerie Queen (1-3)1590 Marlowe's The Jew of Malta1591 Sidney's Astrophil and Stella1592 Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy1592 William Shakespeare's Henry VI Part I1592 William Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part II1593 William Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part III1594 Greene's Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay 1594 Marlowe's Edward II1594 William Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus1594 William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors1594 William Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew1594 William Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Two Gentlemen of Verona1594 William Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost1595 Sidney's An Apologia for Poetrie1595 William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet1595 William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream1596 William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice1596 Spenser's Faerie Queen (4-6)1597 William Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part I1597 William Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part II1598 William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing1598 William Shakespeare's Henry V1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar1600 Kemp's Nine Daies Wonder1600 Dekker's Shoemaker's Holiday1600 Jonson Cynthia's Revels 1601 William Shakespeare's Richard II1601 Jonson Poetaster 1600 William Shakespeare's Richard III1600 William Shakespeare's Hamlet1600 William Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor1602 William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night1602 William Shakespeare's All's Well That Ends Well1603 Jonson Sejanus 1604 Marston's The Malcontent1604 William Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida

Page 2: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

1604 William Shakespeare's Measure for Measure1604 William Shakespeare's Othello1605 Jonson Volpone 1605 Bacon's The Advancement of Learning1606 William Shakespeare's King Lear1606 William Shakespeare's Macbeth1606 William Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra1606 Ben Jonson's Volpone1607 William Shakespeare's Coriolanus1607 Beaumont and Fletcher Knight of the Burning Pestle1607 William Shakespeare's Timon of Athens1607 Tourneur's The Revenger's Tragedy1608 William Shakespeare's Pericles1609 Ben Jonson's The Silent Woman1609 Beaumont & Fletcher's The Knight of the Burning Pestle1610 Ben Jonson's The Alchemist1610 Beaumont and Fletcher Philaster1611 William Shakespeare's Tempest1611 Beaumont and Fletcher The Maid's Tragedy1611 Beaumont and Fletcher A King and No King1611 William Shakespeare's Macbeth1611 Ben Jonson's Catiline1611 William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale1612 Webster's The White Devil1612 William Shakespeare's Henry VIII1612 William Shakespeare's The Two Noble Kinsmen1613 Beaumont and Fletcher The Scornful Lady1614 Jonson's Bartholomew Fayre1614 Webster's Duchess of Malfi1614 Sir Walter Raleigh's History of the World1616 Ben Jonson's Works published in folio1618 Beaumont and Fletcher The Humorous Lieutenant1623 Publication of Shakespeare's First Folio1624 Thomas Middleton A Game at Chess

INFLUENCES ON THE ELIZABETHAN LITERATURE

A. Renaissance

The word “Renaissance” is the French word for “rebirth.” The Renaissance refers to the rebirth of humanism during the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries in Europe. The Renaissance period was a time of rebirth of:

1. Humanism: Humanism downplayed religious and secular dogma and instead attached the greatest importance to the dignity and worth of the individual.

2. Fine arts: Sculptors such as Donatello and later Michelangelo went back to classical techniques. Leonardo Da Vinci and Raphael were some of the most prominent Renaissance painters.

Page 3: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

3. Literature: In Italy, writers focused mostly on translating and studying classic Latin and Greek works. William Shakespeare, Giovanni Boccaccio and Christopher Marlowe were the famous writers.

4. Philosophy:  The influence of the Italian scholar Petrarch, who revitalized interest in the classical thought of the Greeks and Romans

5. Science and Technology: Some of the other significant inventions during the Renaissance period were the cast-iron pipe, portable clock, rifle barrel, shotgun, screwdriver and wrench. Galileo Galilei and Nicolaus Copernicus.

6. Religion and spirituality: Martin Luther started the Protestant Reformation in Germany7. Leisure: Elizabethan Plays were watched with great zeal. For sport, jousting was popular during

the Renaissance era.

B. Tastes of the Elizabethan Audiences

Athletic Interest (Juggling, Tumbling, Fencing, Wrestling of Expert Combatants), Love for Noise & Outcry, Romance, Supernatural, Chance, Music & Songs, Interest in Supernatural Elements, Tastes of the Patrons

C. Traditions of Primitive Theatre

1. Greek: Aristotle’s Concept of Tragedy, Imitation, Unities, Tragic Hero (plot, character, diction, thought, spectacle, and song). Aristotle lays out six elements of tragedy: plot, character, diction, thought, spectacle, and song.

2. Senecan Influence: Translations of Greek Tragedies, Grand Language, Little Action & Dependence on Chorus, Revenge & Crime, No Catharsis or Tragic Relief.

D. Elizabethan Stage

Blackfriars (13th Century) Dominican Monastery

Page 4: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

The Globe Theatre (1599)

Elizabethan Costumes

Development of English Drama

1. Early Drama: Living Pictures (Pageants), No Dialogue2. Mysteries and Miracle Plays3. Moralities/Allegorical Plays 4. Interludes 5. Elizabethan Tragedy & Comedy

First Tragedy Gorboduc by Thomas Sackville & Thomas Norton First Comedy Ralph Roister Doister by Nicholas Udall

Types of Early Elizabethan Drama

1. Classical Tradition: Tragic Action, Unities, Indoor Performances, Aristocrats

Page 5: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

2. Popular Theatre: Imaginative, Lack of Unities, Interludes, Melodrama, Crudity, Language

Difference between Greek Drama and Elizabethan Drama

1. Unity versus Variety2. Characters3. Subject Matter4. Staging

Christopher Marlowe & University Wits

University Wits are a group of young dramatists who wrote and performed in London towards the end of the 16th century. They are called University Wits because they were the witty students of Cambridge or Oxford. They were all more or less acquainted with each other and most of them led irregular and uncertain life.

Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Kyd, Thomas Lodge, Thomas Nash, Robert Greene, George Peele and John Lyly were the members of this group. There are some characteristics which are commonly to be found in their plays.

Thomas Kyd: Revenge play. “The Spanish Tragedy” is the best work of Thomas Kyd.

Thomas Lodge is a lawyer by profession but he has given up his legal studied and has taken literary career. He has written only few dramas. “Rosalynde” is the most famous of his romantic comedies. It is said that Shakespeare has taken the plot of his “As You Like It” from Lodge’s “Rosalynde”.

Thomas Nash is a professional journalist. He also takes part in the then politics. His works have some satiric tone. “Unfortunate Traveller” is his best work which has much influence as far as the development of English novel is concerned.

Robert Greene’s plays have a great contribution in the development of English drama. Although his art of charachterization is weak and his style is not outstading, his humour is very much interesting.

George Peele is another important dramatist of the University Wits. His plays have romantic, satiric and historical evidence. He has no attraction towards the poetry. He handles Blank-verse with variety. He also has a sense of humour and pathos. However, “Edward I” is perhaps his best work.

John Lyly is another great dramatist who has a strong interest towards the romantic comedy. His comedies are marked by elaborate dialogue, jests and retorts. However, we can find his influence in Shakespearean comedies. “Midas” is one of the most important works of John Lyly which has shaken the development of the romantic comedy in English literature.

Christopher Marlowe

Merits of Marlowe

1. Mighty Line/Blank Verse2. Emotion and Passion3. Poetic (Heroes)

Page 6: · Web view... William Shakespeare's Henry V 1598 Jonson Every Man in his Humour 1599 Shakespeare's As You Like It 1599 Jonson Every Man out of his Humour 1600 William Shakespeare's

4. Tragedy of Character5. Inner Conflict6. Individual Heroes7. Machiavellian Hero

Demerits of Marlowe

1. Less attention given to Minor Characters2. Lack of Women Characters or Poor Characterization3. Weak Plots4. Poor Handling of Comic Interlude5. Lack of Patriotism6. One-man Show