Volpone, critical opinon (AO3) Flashcards

1
Q

“the link between the main plot and the sub plot is tenuous”

A

Diane Maybank on the link between the main and sub-plot

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2
Q

“In its concentration on English folly as opposed to Italian vice it provides a foil for the grimmer main plot”

A

Diane Maybank on the sub plot as relief

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3
Q

“Sir Pol can be seen as a comic distortion of Volpone”

A

Diane Maybank on the link between Volpone and Sir Poltic

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4
Q

“Their (Sir Pol/LWB) marital roles are reversed, LWB having the upper hand”

A

Diane Maybank on confusion of gender in the sub plot

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5
Q

“The ending of the sub plot in some ways reflects the ending of the main plot”

A

Diane Maybank on the link between the endings of the main and sub-plot

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6
Q

“they provide a geographical bridge between the world of the play and the world of an audience,

A

Diane Maybank on the importance of the English in Volpone

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7
Q

-connection on a ‘thematic level’

A

Jonas A. Barish on connection between main and sub plot -

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8
Q
  • Mosca functions as a conventional vice figure often found in Medieval and Renaissance literature
A

Glynne Wickham

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9
Q
  • Jonson attempts to generate moral impulses in his audience by dramatising a world which has lost all ability to do so
A

Hiscock on Johnson’s provocative writing

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10
Q

…the entire ambience of the play undergoes a profound change

A

A critic on the rape scene as a watershed

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11
Q

Jonson’s characterisations enable the audience to understand…the same feat was later accomplished in poetry with Milton’s Satan

A

Campbell on Jonson’s characterisation of the evil doers

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12
Q
  • Volpone is a satanic challenger to God’s order and society
A

Knapp on Volpone as a challenge to society

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13
Q

Competitive masculine energies are displayed by most of the major characters

A

Huebert on masculinity

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14
Q

Celia is a strong minded character who plays not only a pivotal role in the plot but an important thematic one as well

A

Maus on Celia

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15
Q

The audience in Tyrone Guthrie’s 1964 in Minneapolis famously applauded the rape

A

McEvoy on the Minneapolis audience

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16
Q

Jonson found to his annoyance that some playgoers thought Volpone’s treatment too harsh for comedy…presumably due partly to admiration for the daring and panache of the rogue

A

A critic on Jonson’s audiences’ favouring of Volpone

17
Q

Jonson’s characters take the classics far less seriously than Jonson did and this explains how the behaviour of those characters often falls short of classical ideals

A

Lyne on the character’s contempt for the classics

18
Q

Not only are the theatrical skills of Volpone and Mosca expertly deployed to the maximum profit of the play; we also see a delight in self-transformation which cannot be separated from the energy of capitalist accumulation…

A

McEvoy on the relationship between capital accumalation and self-transformation