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OverviewThe Alchemist has long been admired as one of Ben Jonson's best dramas-Samuel Taylor Coleridge famously deemed it one of the most 'perfect' plots in literature. Its satiric cleverness and metatheatricality have delighted audiences from its first performance to the present day; readers and play-goers are swept up in the schemes of a fake alchemist and other determined fraudsters whose scams appear to offer easy wealth and immortality to their morally compromised victims. While no characters emerge unscathed by Jonson's satire, and while alchemy itself is revealed as most likely a sham, the play is nonetheless a tribute to the transformative - indeed, the alchemical-powers of the theater.This edition includes a helpful introduction to the play, including discussion of its performance history and background information on alchemy. Thorough annotations to the text are also provided, as are contextual materials, including a selection of Jonson's sources, further materials on alchemy, and an example of the 'rogue' or 'coney-catching' literature that informs Jonson's portrayal of the grifters in the play. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ben Jonson , John GreenwoodPublisher: Broadview Press Ltd Imprint: Broadview Press Ltd Weight: 0.215kg ISBN: 9781554813674ISBN 10: 1554813670 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 30 June 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction The Alchemist In Context On Alchemy: from Geoffrey Chaucer, 'The Canon's Yeoman's Tale,' from The Canterbury Tales (1387-1400) Desiderius Erasmus, 'The Alchemist' (1524) from Martin Ruland, A Lexicon of Alchemy (1612) On Criminals and 'Coney-Catching': from Robert Greene, A Disputation Between a He Cony-Catcher and a She Cony-Catcher (1592) Image: from Thomas Harman, A Caveat or Warning for Common Cursetors vulgarly called Vagabonds (1566; revised 1567/68) On Playwriting: from Aristotle, Poetics from Ben Jonson, Timber, or Discoveries made upon men and matter as they have flowed out of his daily Readings, or had their reflux to his peculiar Notion of the Times (1641)ReviewsIntroducing students to this witty, farcical play will be so much easier with the new Broadview edition. The joy of this play is its topical satire, and to access it students need a thorough grounding in alchemy and in the contemporary culture of early modern London, both of which this edition provides. -- Margaret J. Oakes, Furman University The new Broadview edition of The Alchemist, edited by John Greenwood, is a delight. The play's annotations are clear and complete. The edition includes extensive contextual materials, including cony-catching pamphlets, an alchemist's guide, and some of Jonson's own commonplace book's entries. I am looking forward to teaching the play with this exciting new text. -- Rebecca Ann Bach, University of Alabama at Birmingham John Greenwood's edition of Ben Jonson's riotous early modern comedy, The Alchemist, captures the play's essentials for student and more advanced scholar alike with its concise and informative introduction, helpful notes, and judiciously chosen appendix material. The edition will be a delight to use in the classroom. -- Mathew Martin, Brock University Introducing students to this witty, farcical play will be so much easier with the new Broadview edition. The joy of this play is its topical satire, and to access it students need a thorough grounding in alchemy and in the contemporary culture of early modern London, both of which this edition provides. -- Margaret J. Oakes, Furman University The new Broadview edition of The Alchemist, edited by John Greenwood, is a delight. The play's annotations are clear and complete. The edition includes extensive contextual materials, including coney-catching pamphlets, an alchemist's guide, and some of Jonson's own commonplace book's entries. I am looking forward to teaching the play with this exciting new text. -- Rebecca Ann Bach, University of Alabama at Birmingham John Greenwood's edition of Ben Jonson's riotous early modern comedy, The Alchemist, captures the play's essentials for student and more advanced scholar alike with its concise and informative introduction, helpful notes, and judiciously chosen appendix material. The edition will be a delight to use in the classroom. -- Mathew Martin, Brock University Author InformationJohn Greenwood is an instructor at St. Jerome's University in Waterloo. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |