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    Daye, Anne 2014. The Role ofLe Balet Comiquein Forging the Stuart Masque: Part 1 The Jacobean Initiative. Dance Research, Vol. 32, Issue. 2, p. 185.

    Naumann, Friedrich Liebermann, Wolf-Lüder Fussel, Marian Filippi, Elena Landfester, Manfred Gáldy, Andrea M. Erben, Dietrich Weichenhan, Michael Hübner, Wolfgang Kirschner, Stefan Gruber, Joachim Kahle, Manuela Kullmann, Thomas Maissen, Thomas Ammann, Andreas Huber-Rebenich, Gerlinde Gastgeber, Christian Wolfzettel, Friedrich Hinz, Berthold Riedel, Volker Bezner, Frank Deflers, Isabelle Frank, Günter Ruby, Sigrid Jerke, Tina Hintzen, Beate Heesakkers, Christiaan Lambert Laureys, Marc Fuchs, Thorsten Huss, Bernhard Hoeges, Dirk Folkerts, Menso Maike, Rotzoll Leitgeb, Maria-Christine Leopold, Silke Kuhn-Chen, Barbara Pietschmann, Klaus Berns, Jörg Jochen Senger, Hans Gerhard Thurn, Nikolaus Reinhardt, Volker Bergemann, Lutz Kallendorf, Craig de Beer, Susanna Ciccolella, Federica Gummert, Peter Schirrmeister, Albert Kuhlmann, Peter Füssel, Marian Schuh, Maximilian Gáldy, Andrea Rotzoll, Maike Almási, Gábor Schenk, Peter Gareis, Iris Korenjak, Martin Auffarth, Christoph Wyss, Beatrice and Formisano, Marco 2014. Renaissance-Humanismus. p. 1.

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  • Print publication year: 2000
  • Online publication date: May 2006

12 - Jonson's classicism

Summary

The term classicism is used here in two senses - as a literary and philosophical system that asserts and celebrates the existence of a series of timeless, unvarying principles of conduct and thought: attention to form, decorum, knowledge, the past, imitation, consistency, fidelity, personal worth; and as an acknowledgment that those principles are embodied in the writings of ancient Greece and Rome, which should be taken as models by all later writers aspiring to repeat the process.

It is clear that Jonson embraced classicism in the second sense. He consciously imitated ancient Greek and Roman authors (although mainly Roman), and called attention to his debt in learned notes to his plays and masques. But he was also a classicist in the first sense, for he yearned to associate himself with the stability of the classical tradition, and the prestige of its authors. One could argue about the wisdom of attempting to translate certain classical concepts into seventeenth-century artifacts, but to consider Jonson outside of the classical tradition would be as anomalous as to ignore Herman Melville's interest in the sea.

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The Cambridge Companion to Ben Jonson
  • Online ISBN: 9781139000154
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CCOL0521641136
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