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Everyman

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An event (Death) ... Death ... 'For, after death, amends man no man make. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Everyman


1
Everyman
  • A Morality Play

2
Everyman
  • Written around 1485
  • French church had declared itself independent
    from papal authority.
  • Gutenberg Bible had been printed.
  • Literate commoners had a better understanding of
    church doctrine.
  • Moral corruption and abuses of power were the
    subject of debate within the Catholic church.
  • Chaucer had satirized such in the portraits of
    the Monk, Summoner, Pardoner and Friar.

3
Everyman
  • Morality Play
  • Late medieval genre
  • Encouraged by the church and civil authorities
    because they taught social and moral values
    through amusing dramatic actions.
  • Morality characters are allegorical plots
    action must be interpreted as teaching something
    about the human condition.
  • Often dramatize mans struggle to avoid vice and
    seek virtue.

4
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • Form of extended metaphor in which objects and
    persons within a narrative are equated with
    meanings that lie outside the narrative itself.
  • Two levels of meaning
  • Literal
  • What the figures do in the narrative
  • Symbolic
  • What the figures stand for, outside the narrative

5
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • May involve personification of
  • Abstract qualities (Truth, Beauty)
  • An event (Death)
  • Another sort of abstraction (Una in Spensers
    Faerie Queene the one True Church)
  • Historical personage (Piers Plowman Christ)
  • Characters, events, and setting may be historical
    or fictitious.

6
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • Test is that characters, etc., must represent
    meanings independent of the action described in
    the surface story.

7
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • On the surface
  • Everyman is about a man who sets out on a journey
    and the people he meets.
  • Book I of the Faerie Queene is about a knight
    killing a dragon and rescuing a princess.

8
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • On the allegorical level both stories concern the
    duties of a Christian and the way to achieve
    salvation.

9
Everyman
  • Allegory
  • Frequently (but not always) concerned with
    matters of great importance.
  • Life and death
  • Damnation and salvation
  • Social or personal morality and immorality
  • Also used for satiric purposes.

10
Everyman
  • Allegory is used throughout the play
  • The names of characters
  • Sins and bonds that tie Good Deeds to the ground
  • Confession is a river as well as a Holy Man
  • Contrition is a garment
  • Death is a literal hole in the ground

11
Everyman
  • Reflects views of the Medieval Church
  • Life is a struggle between good and evil.
  • Salvation is the central goal of life.
  • Things of this world are fleeting and
    insignificant.
  • The Church is a necessary guide to salvation.

12
Everyman
  • Key question the playwright addresses
  • What must a man do to be saved?

13
Everyman
  • Characters
  • Everyman
  • God
  • Death
  • Allegorical representations of the worldly things
    and spiritual attributes which will affect his
    salvation

14
Everyman
  • The playwright intends the central character
    (Everyman) to represent every human being
  • Death is a universal human experience.

15
Everyman
  • Death appears unexpectedly in Everyman
  • Suggests that one should always be prepared at
    any time to die.
  • Everyman is shocked when Death arrives.
  • He is not prepared for his reckoning with God.

16
Everyman
  • In time of need, he is deserted by
  • His casual companions
  • His kinsmen
  • His wealth
  • He can take none of these things with him to the
    grave

17
Everyman
  • Everyman can only take with him what he has
    given his Good Deeds.
  • However, his Good Deeds are sick and weakly.
  • His sins have rendered her too weak to stand
  • He has neglected Good Deeds
  • Has placed too much emphasis on things such as
    Fellowship and Goods.

18
Everyman
  • Goods
  • Immobilized because the chests and bags of gold
    are lying upon him
  • Suggests that earthly possessions weigh one down
    in the quest for salvation.
  • If Everyman had loved Goods less/more moderately
    and had given some to the poor, he would not be
    weighted down by them now.

19
Everyman
  • Recurring point is made that man can take nothing
    with him from this world that he has received,
    only what he has given.
  • Once Everyman goes through the various offices of
    the Church, his Good Deeds can rise and speak for
    him.
  • Having been redeemed, Everyman and his Good Deeds
    descend into the grave.

20
Everyman
  • Doctor comes to stage to reiterate the moral of
    the story
  • For, after death, amends man no man make.
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