
Ben Jonson and Envy
Cambridge University Press, 4/16/2009
EAN 9780521517430, ISBN10: 0521517435
Hardcover, 242 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
In the early modern period, envy was often represented iconographically in the image of the Medusa, with snaky locks and a poisonous gaze. Ben Jonson and Envy investigates the importance of envy to Jonson's imagination, showing that he perceived spectators and readers as filled with envy, and created strategies to defend his work from their distorting and potentially 'deadly' gaze. Drawing on historical and anthropological studies of evil eye beliefs, this study focuses on the authorial imperative to charm and baffle ritualistically the eye of the implied spectator or reader, in order to protect his works from defacement. Comparing the exchange between authors and readers to social relations, the book illuminates the way in which the literary may be seen to be informed by popular culture. Ben Jonson and Envy tackles a previously overlooked, but vital, aspect of Jonson's poetics.
1. Introduction
2. An anatomy of envy
3. Defacement
anxiety and the Jonsonian imagination
4. Sanctuary
Jonson's prophylactic strategy
5. Monument
turning the text to stone
6. Being posthumous.