ABSTRACT

Jonson, Shakespeare, and Aristotle on Comedy relates new understandings of Aristotle’s dramatic theory to the comedy of Ben Jonson and William Shakespeare. Typically, scholars of Renaissance drama have treated Aristotle’s theory only as a possible historical influence on Jonson’s and Shakespeare’s drama, focusing primarily on their tragedies. Yet recent classical scholarship has undone important misconceptions about Aristotle’s Poetics held by early modern commentators and fleshed out the theory of comedy latent within it. By first synthesizing these developments and then treating them as an interpretive theory, rather than simply an historical influence, this book demonstrates a remarkable consonance between Aristotelian principles of plot and its emotional effect, on the one hand, and the comedy of Shakespeare and Jonson, on the other. In doing so, it also reveals surprising similarities between these seemingly divergent dramatists.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Aristotle, Jonson, Shakespeare

chapter 1|14 pages

The Poetics and Comedy

part 29I|48 pages

chapter 2|10 pages

Comic Error and the Hoax

chapter 3|18 pages

“Laid flat” in the “flame and height of their humours”

Exposure in Jonson

chapter 4|20 pages

Shakespeare’s Exposure of “seeming”

part 77II|44 pages

chapter 5|10 pages

Indignation

chapter 6|17 pages

Jonson’s Shifting “furor poeticus”

chapter 7|17 pages

“Kill Claudio”

Indignation and Pity in Shakespeare

part 121III|60 pages

chapter 8|17 pages

Catharsis

chapter 9|23 pages

“Checked by strength and clearness”

Jonson’s Comic Catharsis

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

The “Comedy of Affliction”