Pages: 144 (Paperback) Editor: Roma Gill ISBN: 0713667907 Pub: A & C Black Publishers Ltd Pub date: 2003-05-30 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 25584
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Reader Reviews:Sweet analytics, 'tis thou hast ravished me! (1/2 people found this helpful)This play is possibly the best example of Elizabethan theatre. Its soliloquies are passionate and eloquent, and have a beauty and poetry to them that I feel surpasses even Shakespeare. The themes of the play are so much more interesting than usual themes, many of which are overly concerned with love - here Marlowe recognises the depravity of man's base nature and shows it to great theatrical effect. Strangely, considering the dislikeable nature of the protagonist and the vile deeds he commits, we are still sympathising with him when he meets his grisly end. This brings us back to the idea of forgiveness for all sins, and whether that does actually apply. Can any sin committed on earth be worthy of such eternal punishment? This play makes us question our ideas about God, about religion, about sin, about the afterlife, and about the effects of our own actions. It is a shocking and thought-provoking play which I can honestly say was a pleasure to study - and anyone who knows me will attest to my hatred of English Literature! A farcical drama but no tragedy (2/4 people found this helpful)This drama never reaches the level of a tragedy. Faust only signs his pact with the devil to know evanescent pleasures and aimless pointless powers. He becomes a trickster who builds a horse with straw and gets fun from mocking the Pope and supporting the German Emperor Charles V against him. He gets a glimpse of Helen, the object of the Trojan war, but about nothing else, except grapes in december and wine from anywhere. Faust is the dupe of the deal because he gets nothing serious, not even real love, from this devil who in the end gets averything : the soul, the body, the flesh, the blood, the brain, and he can even tear every limb off the body of the foolish doctor. We could think it is a tale that supports the puritan fundamentalist vision of God and the devil, yet he laughs at the Pope, systematically creates havoc in Wittenberg, Luther’s homeland, and he ridicules anything sacred in the world. Is Marlowe an iconoclast, or is he the precursor of Shakespeare who deals with these spirits as if they were dreams, nothing serious, just entertaining friendly beings, or even Purcell who reduces these witches to fairies who help humans in their matrimony ? Marlowe was a child in a way and he embodies both the total lack of respect of teenagers for anything adult, and the fears of children in front of the bad dark boogeyman in the cupboard or under the bed. This play has aged tremendously. Dr Jacques COULARDEAU the fall of a great man? (1/5 people found this helpful)The story of Dr.Faustus is not originaly by Marlow. It is an old german story. Yet Marolow makes it his own using, at the time, comtempory techniques. The use of choruses is particularily effective. Marlow tells us what happens before we see it. This allows us to fully concentrate on more important questions - why? and how?. A timeless classic that tells an extrodinary life rivalled only by Marlow's! It is an insight into renaissance theology and ideology. It's only downfall would be that the language lacks eloquence when placed next to shakespeare. Similar ProductsYork Notes Advanced on "Dr.Faustus" by Christopher Marlowe (York Notes Advanced) The Whitsun Weddings (Faber Poetry) Woyzeck (Drama Classics) Eighteenth-century Women Dramatists (Oxford World's Classics) Gagarin Way CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Poetry, Drama & Criticism -> Drama -> Playwrights, A-Z -> ( M-N ) -> Marlowe, Christopher
Books -> Subjects -> Poetry, Drama & Criticism -> Drama -> By Period -> 16th to 18th Centuries (Elizabethan, Jacobean) Books -> Subjects -> Music, Stage & Screen -> Performing Arts -> Plays & Drama -> 16th to 18th Century Books -> Subjects -> Music, Stage & Screen -> Performing Arts -> Plays & Drama -> Bestsellers
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