炼金术士与中世纪精灵传奇

IF 0.1 1区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Steve Bull
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在《炼金术士》中,多尔的仙女女王经常被评论家解读为约翰逊对民间信仰和迷信持怀疑态度的代表。出现在店员Dapper面前的超自然君主-妓女被认为是来自同时代的骗子,他们声称与精灵王国接触,以便将易受骗的顾客从他们的钱中分离出来。因此,琼森笔下的仙人女王符合对早期现代戏剧中仙人本质的更广泛的批判性讨论,在这些讨论中,仙人经常被定义为来自农村和国内的民间传说传统。然而,尽管民间传说在现代早期阶段对仙人的描述中有一定的意义(例如,参见莎士比亚的《仲夏夜之梦》中的Puck),但这种观点倾向于淡化浪漫在早期现代社会中的重要性,以及中世纪浪漫传统在将仙人融入早期现代文学和戏剧中的持续影响。本文以《炼金术士》为例,阐述了浪漫在塑造与早期现代仙子相关的主题和主题方面的持续重要性。多尔的仙女女王是三个骗子策划的骗局的一部分,但她的角色和外表仍然借鉴了一些浪漫的主题,将仙女与财富、贵族和人类道德的考验等同起来。通过认识到约翰逊作品中与浪漫的联系,本文提出了一个问题,即我们如何才能更好地理解《炼金术士》中仙后情节的含义。约翰逊并没有放弃他对超自然现象的怀疑态度,而是用这些主题来探索贪婪、社会流动性和新财富的主题,这些主题贯穿了整个剧本和他的整个作品。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Alchemist and Medieval Faerie Romance
In The Alchemist, Doll's faerie queen is frequently interpreted by critics as representative of Jonson's scepticism toward folkloric belief and superstition. The supernatural-monarch-come-prostitute who appears before Dapper the clerk is thought to be drawn from contemporary accounts of cozeners who would claim to be in contact with the faerie realm in order to part gullible patrons from their money. Jonson's faerie queen thus fits into wider critical discussions on the nature of faeries in Early Modern drama, in which faeries are frequently defined as deriving from rural and domestic folkloric tradition. However, whilst there is certainly some truth to the significance of folklore in representations of faeries on the early modern stage (see Shakespeare's Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream, for example), such arguments have a tendency to downplay the significance of romance in Early Modern society and the ongoing influence of medieval romance convention in the way that faeries are incorporated into Early Modern literature and drama. This essay focuses on The Alchemist as an example of the continued importance of romance in shaping the themes and motifs that are associated with Early Modern faeries. Doll's faerie queen appears as part of a con enacted by the three cozeners, but her role and appearance still draw on certain romance motifs that equate faeries with wealth, aristocracy, and the testing of human morality. Through recognising a connection to romance in Jonson's work, this essay questions how we might better appreciate the meaning of The Alchemist's faerie queen episodes. Jonson, without relinquishing his sceptical approach to the supernatural, uses these motifs as a way of exploring themes of greed, social mobility, and new wealth, themes that permeate throughout the play and throughout his work as a whole.
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来源期刊
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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