Philip Massinger: the man and the playwright
dc.contributor.author
Dunn, Thomas Alexander
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-09-13T15:51:17Z
dc.date.available
2018-09-13T15:51:17Z
dc.date.issued
1952
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
Little apology is necessary by way of preface to a critical study
of Messinger. No full -length, detailed study of the playwright has eve
appeared in English. All that we have of what might be called 'book
length' is a very brief work by Professor Cruickshank that was published
over thirty years ago, and this can scarcely now be considered adequate.
Even critical essays on Messinger are rare, and comments and asides on
the playwright which have appeared in the more general studies of the
Jacobean- Caroline period have not usually been notable either for their
perspicacity or for the knowledge they reveal of his work. It is in
some measure as an attempt to fill this gap that this thesis has been
written.
en
dc.description.abstract
I have not, however, attempted to claim for Massinger a position
or an importance that does not accord with his worth. He is not, it
must be admitted, a great, or even always a very good, dramatist.
Nevertheless, his plays are of considerable interest as samples of the
romantic tragi- comedies that held the stage after the death of Shakespeare. In addition, it must be remembered that Messinger was the
principal writer for the public theatres from 1625 to 1640 -- a fact
that in itself argues for his claim to closer examination. Thus the
first object of this thesis has been an examination and appraisal of
certain aspects of Messinger's dramatic technique.
en
dc.description.abstract
Of additional, and perhaps in some respects even greater, interest,
however, is the character of Massinger himself; a character that emerges
with extraordinary clarity and precision of detail from a reading of
his plays. Therefore, my second object has been to reveal or deduce
something of the nature of i;iassinger's mind and character; to attempt,
if you like, to see Messinger plain. Both of these objects are
comprehended in the title of this thesis.
en
dc.description.abstract
Perhaps something of the eclipse which Massinger's work has
undergone amongst students can be explained by the fact that he is
deeply involved in the tangled undergrowth of collaboration which
surrounds the Beaumont- Fletcher corpus. The reader will find little
discussion of such matters in this thesis. Many scholars have
laboured on the problems of the Jacobean collaborators, and their work
forms an extensive literature in itself, embracing studies in ,eaumont,
Fletcher, Massinger, Field, Shirley, Heywood, and practically every
other writer of the period as well as the vast mass of documentary
material pertaining to the stage of the times. I have felt, then,
that to deal adequately with such material would have celled for a
preliminary volume quite away from my immediate purposes, and that the
consideration of such problems here would have confused the reader and
obscured the object of my study, Massinger himself. It has seemed to
iv
me preferable to approach the Jacobean situation from the other end,
and, by considering Massinger in the plays which are definitely his, to
make my work absolute as far as he is concerned, but at the same time
make it a ground -work to the wider study of the dramatic collaboration
of Fletcher and his group by establishing the Massingerian technique
and method of approach. It follows, therefore, that the plays with
which I am almost solely concerned in this thesis are the fifteen plays
which Massinger wrote on his own.
en
dc.description.abstract
Of course, in a general critical study of any playwright as
prolific as Messinger, it is essential, in order to contain the subject
within reasonable bounds, that a certain amount of material should be
allowed to 6o by the board. This is perhaps rather a negative way of
saying that I have consciously and deliberately dealt only briefly with
one or two topics which are sometimes considered important in a study
of a playwright. My deliberate intention in this respect will be better
understood when I say that I consider such topics as jetsam rather than
as flotsam. My dismissal of questions of collaboration and attribution has already been explained. Similarly, I have considered that
questions of the sources of Massinger's plays have already been
exhaustively covered by the industrious researches of German scholars at
the beginning of this century, and that the more technical aspects of
versification are, in Massinger's case, of interest chiefly in connexion
with problems of collaboration. I have chosen to concentrate chiefly
(though not by any means exclusively) on matters which have become
prominent largely within the last thirty or forty years -- such matters
as stagecraft, dramatic structure, the dramatist's view of the world,
and blank -verse style. I have endeavoured to deal with such matters
in ways that, while they have become commoner in studies of Shakespeare,
have not yet been applied at all extensively to other writers -- and
have certainly never been applied to Massinger before. I have also
endeavoured to suggest new methods of approach (in particular in
respect of matters of style) which might be applied with profit to
other Jacobean dramatists. Throughout the thesis I have constantly
compared and contrasted Massinger with Shakespeare; with Shakespeare,
that is to say, both as a yardstick of dramatic excellence whose work
is universally known and admired, and as the only other writer of the
period with whom Massinger can be fully and fairly contrasted. In
addition, in the general biographical introduction which comprises my
first chapter I have re- examined and re- assessed the many conjectures
and speculations which surround the facts of Massinger's life and have
added some new facts and deductions. of my own.
en
dc.description.abstract
It is perhaps not out of place here to make a plea for a full
and modern edition of the plays of Massinger. Gifford's edition,
which I have had perforce to use for this thesis, is a remarkable
piece of work for its period but is now quite out -of -date and hopelessly
inadequate. Several of the plays have been published in individual
and fairly modern editions (See Bibliography), but this is not
sufficient. What is required is a complete edition which will give
the reader (I am not so concerned for the student of textual or
bibliographical matters) a text which he can both study and enjoy and
from which the scholar can draw his line-references, similar to those
which we now possess for Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. Of course, such
an edition would have to part of a wider plan which embodied an edition
of all the Beaumont and Fletcher plays. At the moment it is not
possible to obtain Beaumont and Fletcher in an edition which is either
convenient or reliable. Such an edition, the Variorum Edition, under
the general editorship of A.H.Bullen, was started in 1904, but for
some reason or other only four volumes of the projected twelve appeared..
Scholars will never be able to start properly on all the problems of
the Jacobean theatre until such editions become generally available.
Until then, there must remain much research into this interesting
period of the drama which it will be difficult, or even impossible, to
carry out.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/32069
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 20
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
Philip Massinger: the man and the playwright
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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