Saturday, October 12, 2013

Why is there a distinction made between "Elizabethan Jonson" and "Jacobean Jonson" in regard to Ben Jonson?

English literary periods are named for monarchs, as with the
Elizabethan period, or historical events, as with the Restoration period, or for great literary
times or movements, as with the Middle English or Romantic periods. Ben Jonson wrote during the
two literary periods named for Queen Elizabeth I and King James I. Both of these periods fell
under the broader literary period called the Renaissance
period.


About the Elizabethan period, William Shakespeare was the
preeminent dramatist during the Elizabethan period and, though he lived and wrote after James I
took the throne, is rarely, if ever, associated with the Jacobean period. This is because title="Shakespeare's Work: A Timeline. J. M. Pressle. Shakespeare Resource Center"
href="http://www.bardweb.net/plays/timeline.html">Shakespeare's greatest renown and
the bulk of his work is associated with Elizabeth's reign. Ben Jonson was a contemporary of
Shakespeare's and a friend. As such, Jonson too wrote in the Elizabethan
period.


However, since Jonson (1) emphasized the moral of his plays,
whether drama or comedy, and since (2) his characters were often undeveloped because Jonson
preferred shallow typological characters (character who were types of individuals met in life,
like the clergyman, the swindler, the innocent young woman etc), Jonson's plays were not popular
in Elizabeth's time like Shakespeare's were.


Jonson's greatest work
was written and staged after James I took the throne, especially Volpone
(1605-06), so even though he began writing during Elizabeth's reign and is therefore an
Elizabethan writer, his greatest success was later on during James' reign making him also a
Jacobean writer (Jacobean is derived from the Latin version of the name
James). Since Shakespeare was the predominant influence in the Elizabethan
period and Jonson was not well received then, Jonson had very little (if any) influence during
that period.


After James I took the throne and the Jacobean period
began, href="http://www.bartleby.com/216/0901.html">Jonson's fortunes changed. He staged
Volpone and found he had become an influence for the younger playwrights
coming into their own. Shakespeare was difficult for young playwrights to imitate and model
after, but Jonson had such clear-cut rules for structure and purpose, and his Jacobean plays were
so well received (unlike his Elizabethan plays), that young writers made him their model for
successful play writing.


It is for these reasons that Ben Jonson is
classed as both an Elizabethan and a Jacobean playwright. For added clarification, had Jonson
been as successful as Shakespeare under Queen Elizabeth's rule, he would, like Shakespeare, be
closely associated with only the Elizabethan period. On the other hand, had the preponderance of
Shakespeare's work been produced after 1603, which is when James took the throne (1603–25), then
Shakespeare would, like Jonson, be associated with both the Elizabethan and Jacobean
periods.

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