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Marlowe, Christopher |
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Marlowe, Christopher (1564–1593)English poet and dramatist. His work includes the blank-verse (written in unrhymed verse) plays Tamburlaine the Great in two parts (1587–88), The Jew of Malta (c. 1591), Edward II (c. 1592) and Dr Faustus (c. 1594), the poem Hero and Leander (1598), and a translation of parts of Ovid's Amores. Marlowe transformed the new medium of English blank verse into a powerful, melodic form of expression. He was born in Canterbury and educated at Cambridge University, where he is thought to have become a government agent. His life was turbulent, with a brief imprisonment in connection with a man's death in a brawl (of which he was cleared), and a charge of atheism (following statements given under torture by the English dramatist Thomas Kyd). He was murdered in a Deptford tavern, allegedly in a dispute over the bill, but it may have been a political killing.
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1564 1589 1593 1598 Alleyn, Edward births and deaths blank verse Blount, Edward Cambridge University Canterbury Chapman, George Doctor Faustus, The Tragical History of Doktor Faust Dyce, Alexander Elizabethan literature Faust Greene, Robert Hardwicke, Cedric Webster Hero and Leander | [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The depravity of action displayed by Mortimer pales, however, in comparison with that found in the most radical of Jarman's exaggerations or distensions of Marlovian character: his conception of Isabella. At his most heretical, Marlowe is also deeply traditional--precisely because the tradition he simultaneously fulfills and upends is fundamentally Marlovian (it seems relevant to note here that, as the book progresses, we learn that Christian writings repeatedly play with the Latin root of the word tradition, tradere, which means both "to hand over" and "to betray" [110-12]). In this regard, I find Patrick Cheney's work on Shakespearean authorship particularly useful, since he's not as keen to establish facts about publication dates as he is to examine how Shakespeare's texts themselves meditate on different models of authorship: Ovidian conceptions bleeding into Marlovian, Virgilian into Spenserian. |
Marlovian |
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