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Elizabethan Drama

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In the sixteenth century, the Elizabethan stage became almost wholly professional and public. The new theater groups devoted their entire time to the art and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Elizabethan Drama


1
Elizabethan Drama
  • In the sixteenth century, the Elizabethan stage
    became almost wholly professional and public.
  • The new theater groups devoted their entire time
    to the art and producing plays. The art of acting
    became a profession during the Elizabethan period
    which would provide a good livelihood for the
    actor. Likewise, the production of plays at this
    time was a good financial source.
  • The actors were decorative and wore elaborate
    Elizabethan dress.
  • Companies built their own theatres.

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  • a three-tiered circular building with a large
    protruding platform extending out into the center
    of the enclosure. It was an open structure so
    that natural light entered through the top. The
    spectators sat in either the gallery around the
    sides or down in the "pit."

4
Christopher Marlowe
  • - An actor, poet, and playwright during the reign
    of Britains Queen Elizabeth I (ruled 15581603).
  • He was educated to become a clergyman
  • He was accused of heresy
  • Among the most well known of his plays are
    Tamburlaine, The Jew of Malta, and Doctor Faustus
  • In his writing, he pioneered the use of blank
    versenonrhyming lines of iambic pentameter.

5
Dr. Faustus
  • Written in early 1590s in England
  • Doctor Faustus is a Christian play, it deals with
    the themes at the heart of Christianitys
    understanding of the world.
  • The idea of an individual selling his or her soul
    to the devil for knowledge and power is an old
    motif in Christian folklore.
  • The motif of fall Icarus in Mythology and fallen
    angel, Lucifer

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What lies at the heart of the play? Conflict
between the medieval world and the world of the
emerging Renaissance
  • The medieval world placed God at the center of
    existence and put aside man and the natural
    world.
  • With Renaissance, a new emphasis on the
    individual, on classical learning of Greek, and
    on scientific inquiry into the nature of the
    world.
  • In the medieval academy, theology was the queen
    of the sciences. In the Renaissance, secular
    matters became important.
  • In the medieval model, tradition and authority,
    not individual inquiry, were key.

8
  • CHARACTERS
  • Valdes and Cornelius
  • Chorus
  • Old Man  
  • good and evil angels
  • Lucifer
  • Pope
  • King, knight
  • Wagner
  • Clown, Robin and his friend Rafe as comic relief
  • Horse-courser
  • The Scholars  

9
Setting
  • Europe, mostly Germany and Italy

10
Plot structure
  • Prologue chorus, Tradition of Greek Tragedy
  • What is the function of Chorus?
  • the Chorus, which appears between scenes,
    provides background information and comments on
    the action.
  • Classical and medieval literature typically
    focuses on the lives of the great and
    famoussaints or kings or ancient heroes.
  • the life of an ordinary man, born to humble
    parents. The message is clear in the new world
    of the Renaissance, an ordinary man like Faustus,
    a common-born scholar, is as important as any
    king or warrior, and his story is just as worthy
    of being told.

11
Who is Faustus?
  • Faustus, brilliant sixteenth-century scholar
  • He studied and mastered the sciences of logic,
    mathematics, medicine, law, astrology, chemistry
    and religion.
  • learn to practice magic
  • twenty-four years of service
  • Pact / blood (Why does his blood freeze? What
    appears on his arm after he signed the pact?)
  • Homo fuge, Latin for O man, fly (5.77).
  • Blindness, one of his defining characteristics
    throughout the play

12
For What does Faustus desire power and knowledge
  • misreading of the New Testament anyone who sins
    will be damned eternallyignoring the verses that
    offer the hope of repentance.
  • The reward of sin is death? Thats hard. If we
    say that we have no sin, We deceive ourselves,
    and theres no truth in us. Why then belike we
    must sin, And so consequently die.Ay, we must
    die an everlasting death. What doctrine call you
    this? What will be, shall be! Divinity,
    adieu!These metaphysics of magicians,And
    necromantic books are heavenly! (1.4050)
  • Faustus neglects to read the very next line,
    which states, If we confess our sins, God is
    faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to
    cleanse us from all unrighteousness (1 John
    19).            

13
  • he is the most brilliant scholar in the world,
    his studies have not brought him satisfaction,
    and he is depressed about the limitations of
    human knowledge
  • Ambition for knowledge about the universe,
    wealth, and worldly power and supernatural power
  • At first he is potentially a great man who
    desires to perform beneficial acts for humanity
  • To be the ruler of Germany
  • Gain wealth from the four corners of the globe
    and reshape the map of Europe (both politically
    and physically)
  • transgress the natural laws of the universe
  • go beyond the restrictions placed on humanity.
  • the modern quest for control over nature
  • have godlike qualities.
  • Desire for forbidden knowledge brings about
    destruction. Supernatural powers are reserved for
    the gods and that the person who attempts to
    handle or deal in magical powers must face
    eternal damnation.

14
How does he represent the spirit of the
Renaissance?
  • rejection of the medieval, God-centered universe
  • His belief in human possibility. In Medieval time
    a man should remain content with his station in
    life. Any attempt or ambition to go beyond his
    assigned place was considered a great sin of
    pride. For the medieval person, pride was one of
    the greatest sins that one could commit.
  • Faustus is the personification of possibility and
    pride.
  • he goes through every field of scholarship,
    beginning with logic and proceeding through
    medicine, law, and theology.
  • He resolves, in full Renaissance spirit, to
    accept no limits, traditions, or authorities in
    his quest for knowledge, wealth, and power.

15
Mediavel vs Renaissance
  • According to the Renaissance view, Faustus rebels
    against the limitations of medieval knowledge and
    the restriction put upon humankind.
  • His desire, according to the Renaissance, is to
    transcend the limitations of humanity and rise to
    greater achievements and heights. In the purest
    sense, Faustus wants to prove that he can become
    greater than he presently is.

16
Why does Lucifer want Dr. Faustus soul in
exchange of 24 years service?
  • to enlarge his kingdom and make humans suffer as
    he suffers.

17
What is his internal conflict?
  • Faustus is constantly undecided about whether he
    should repent and return to God or continue to
    follow his pact with Lucifer.
  • Faustus constantly turns his mind to God and he
    wonders if it is too late for him to repent.
  • The good angel and the evil angel, both of whom
    appear at Faustuss shoulder symbolize this
    struggle.
  • my hearts so hardened I cannot repent!
  • personifications of the Seven Deadly Sins to
    offer entertainment
  • Faustus begins to appeal to Christ for mercy, but
    then Lucifer and Mephastophilis enter. They tell
    Faustus to stop thinking of God and then present
    a show of the Seven Deadly Sins. Each sinPride,
    Covetousness, Envy, Wrath, Gluttony, Sloth, and
    finally Lecheryappears before Faustus and makes
    a brief speech. The sight of the sins delights
    Faustuss soul, and he asks to see hell. Lucifer
    promises to take him there that night.

18
What has he done with the newly acquired power?
  • Faustus traveled through the heavens on a chariot
    pulled by dragons in order to learn the secrets
    of astronomy.
  • He travels throughout Europefirst from Germany
    to France and then on to Italy
  • Attack to Catholic Church, a day of feasting in
    Rome, to celebrate the popes victories, and
    Faustus and Mephastophilis agree to use their
    powers to play tricks on the pope
  • Disguise themselves as cardinals and come before
    the pope. The pope gives Bruno to them, telling
    them to carry him off to prison instead, they
    give him a fast horse and send him back to
    Germany.
  • During the meal, Faustus and Mephastophilis make
    themselves invisible and curse noisily and throw
    dishes and food as they are passed around the
    table. The churchmen suspect that there is some
    ghost in the room. The pope and all his
    attendants run away.

19
What has he done with the newly acquired power?
  • invited to the court by German king to entertain
    him by playing tricks. he would like to see
    Alexander the Great and his lover
  • a pair of horns onto the head of the knight who
    makes fun of Faustus.
  • Faustus head is cut off but he comes back to
    life
  • He meets a horse-courser and sells him his horse.
    Faustus warns him not to ride the horse into the
    water
  • He is sent for by the Duke of Vanholt to
    entertain him and he tries to impress him with
    his tricks. The Duchess asks for out-of-season
    grapes.
  • Some scholars asks for Helen.
  • Was this the face that launched a thousand
    ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
    Sweet Helen, make me immortal with a kissHer
    lips sucks forth my soul, see where it flies!
    Come Helen, come, give me my soul again. Here
    will I dwell, for heaven be in these lips,And
    all is dross that is not Helena!
  • Now hast thou but one bare hour to live, And
    then thou must be damned perpetually. Ugly hell
    gape not! Come not, Lucifer! Ill burn my
    booksah, Mephastophilis
  • To conclude, he uses his unlimited power to play
    cheap tricks on people. He has done nth
    magnificient and glorious. He is gradually
    becoming a clown with no heroic aim to carry out.

20
  • Ah Faustus, Now hast thou but one bare hour to
    live, And then thou must be damned perpetually.
    . . . The stars move still, time runs, the
    clock will strike,The devil will come, and
    Faustus must be damned.O Ill leap up to my God!
    Who pulls me down? See, see where Christs blood
    streams in the firmament (sky/heaven)! One drop
    would save my soul, half a drop ah my
    ChristAh, rend not my heart for naming of my
    ChristYet will I call on himO spare me,
    Lucifer!. . . O God, if thou wilt not have
    mercy on my soul, . . . Let Faustus live in
    hell a thousand years, A hundred thousand, and
    at last be saved.. . . Cursed be the parents
    that engendered me No, Faustus, curse thy self,
    curse Lucifer,That hath deprived thee of the
    joys of heaven. . . . My God, my God, look not
    so fierce on me! . . . Ugly hell gape not! Come
    not, Lucifer! Ill burn my booksah,
    Mephastophilis!           (13.57113)

21
Mephastophilis
  • The physical appearance of Mephistophilis
  • His motivations are ambiguous and ambivalent.
  • he himself is damned and speaks freely of the
    horrors of hell.
  • Sympathetic literary devil
  • MEPHASTOPHILIS Why this is hell, nor am I out of
    it. Thinkst thou that I, who saw the face of
    God, And tasted the eternal joys of heaven, Am
    not tormented with ten thousand hells In being
    deprived of everlasting bliss? O Faustus, leave
    these frivolous demands, Which strike a terror
    to my fainting soul.
  • FAUSTUS What, is great Mephastophilis so
    passionate For being deprivèd of the joys of
    heaven? Learn thou of Faustus manly fortitude,
  • And scorn those joys thou never shalt
    possess.           (3.7686)
  • when we hear one rack the name of God/ We fly in
    hope to get his glorious soul (3.4749)

22
Mephastophilis
  • questions about the planets and the heavens.
  • who made the world?
  • The answer is against our kingdom when Faustus
    presses him, Mephastophilis departs angrily
    (5.247).

23
Mephastophilis
  • His description of hell
  • where is hell located?
  • Mephastophilis says that it has no exact location
    but exists everywhere. It is not a place, but a
    condition or state of being. Hell is everywhere
    that the damned are cut off from God eternally.
    Any place where God is not, is hell. Being
    deprived of everlasting bliss is also hell. In
    other words, heaven is being admitted into the
    presence of God, and hell, therefore, is
    deprivation of the presence of God
  • Hell hath no limits, nor is circumscribed In one
    self-place for where we are is hell, And where
    hell is, there must we ever be. . . . All
    places shall be hell that is not heaven.FAUSTUS
    Come, I think hells a fable.MEPHASTOPHILISs.
    Ay, think so still, till experience change thy
    mind.. . .FAUSTUS Thinkst thou that Faustus
    is so fond to imagine That after this life there
    is any pain? Tush, these are trifles and mere
    old wives tales.            (5.120135)

24
Criticism
  • Renaissance, which pushed God to one side and
    sought mastery over nature and society
  • the desire for complete knowledge about the world
    and power can be destructive
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