约翰逊,马斯顿,莎士比亚与话题修辞

IF 0.1 1区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES Ben Jonson Journal Pub Date : 2020-11-01 DOI:10.3366/bjj.2020.0282
James P. Bednarz
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引用次数: 2

摘要

1599年“保罗之子”和1600年“教堂之子”复兴的商业“私人”剧院,改变了16世纪末伦敦的戏剧文化。正是在这一时期,保罗剧院的约翰·马斯顿和黑衣修士剧院的本·琼森通过互相嘲笑和诋毁对方的作品吸引了这些剧院的注意。在这样做的过程中,他们把这些剧院变成了上演意识形态对立的戏剧诠释的论坛。约翰逊和马斯顿并没有像阿尔弗雷德·哈比奇在《莎士比亚与竞争传统》中颇具影响力的一章“竞争剧目”中所设想的那样,联合起来反对“公共”戏剧,而是用保罗和黑衣修士的作品来讽刺对方的作品,讨论他们上演的戏剧的合法性问题,以及创作这些戏剧的作家的地位问题。他们关于戏剧应该是什么和不应该是什么的争论构成了早期现代英国戏剧最重要的批判性争论之一。它构成了对英语当代戏剧的第一次重要批评的一部分。这篇文章的重点是解释,当约翰逊1600年开始为黑衣修士教堂的孩子们写作时,保罗的马斯顿如何成为他的主要目标之一,通过一系列的个人谩骂,严厉谴责当代私人戏剧的淫秽和抄袭。
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Jonson, Marston, Shakespeare and the Rhetoric of Topicality
The revival of commercial “private” theater by the Children of Paul's in 1599 and the Children of the Chapel in 1600 transformed the culture of playgoing in London at the end of the sixteenth century. It was during this period that John Marston at Paul's and Ben Jonson at Blackfriars attracted attention at these theaters by ridiculing each other personally and denigrating each other's work. In doing so they converted these playhouses into forums for staging ideologically opposed interpretations of drama. Rather than aligning themselves with each other against the “public” theater, as Alfred Harbage had assumed in his influential chapter on “The Rival Repertories” in Shakespeare and the Rival Traditions, Jonson and Marston's satire of each other's work used Paul's and Blackfriars to debate the question of the legitimacy of the drama they staged and the status of the writers who composed it. Their debate on what drama should and should not be constitutes one of the most significant critical controversies in early modern English theater. It constitutes part of the first significant criticism of contemporary drama in English. The point of this essay is to account for how, when Jonson began writing for the Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars in 1600, Marston at Paul's became one of his principal targets through personal invective framed as a series of generalized strictures excoriating the obscenity and plagiarism of contemporary private theater.
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Ben Jonson Journal
Ben Jonson Journal LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
80.00%
发文量
26
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