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Christopher Marlowe

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Christopher Marlowe Born in 1564 in Canterbury, Kent. Attended King s School and later Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (theology and ancient languages). – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Christopher Marlowe


1
Christopher Marlowe
  • Born in 1564 in Canterbury, Kent.
  • Attended Kings School and later Corpus Christi
    College, Cambridge (theology and ancient
    languages).
  • While a student at Cambridge Marlowe travelled
    abroad on Government business, from which
    information scholars conclude he was spying for
    Sir Francis Walsinghams secret service. He may
    have infiltrated the Catholic Jesuit Community at
    Rheims in France.

2
Christopher Marlowe
  • However, it is also speculated that he may have
    become a Catholic sympathiser and a double agent
    while in France.
  • Marlowe left for London in 1587 and took up the
    profession of playwright.
  • Dates of composition are not certain
  • Dido, Queen of Carthage
  • Tamburlaine the Great
  • The History of Doctor Faustus
  • The Jew of Malta
  • The Massacre at Paris
  • Edward II

3
Christopher Marlowe
  • Marlowes lifestyle in London was that of a
    single man who lived amongst a crowd of similar
    friends, including Paywright Thomas Kid. His
    contacts included intellectuals, con-men and
    spies. He also had political connections,
    including the spymaster and Secretary of State to
    Queen Elizabeth I, Sir Francis Walsingham.
  • At the time of his death (May 1593) some
    contemporaries claimed that Marlowe expressed
    atheistic views and often tried to persuade men
    to Atheism.
  • However we cannot take this as straightforward
    truth.

4
The Faust Story
  • It is now clear to us that the real Dr. Faust, on
    whom Marlowe based his play, was not a magician
    at all but rather an incredible braggart and
    trickster. His stories were bred in the German
    inns of the sixteenth century, an environment
    described by E. M. Butler as a place where
    "jugglers, charlatans, and quacks of all kinds
    thrived. . ., the ideal breeding ground for those
    crass deceptions and knavish tricks associated
    with the real Faust" (121).

5
  • Dr. Faust was known to publicize himself as chief
    of all astrologers, the most learned chemist of
    all times, a palmist, a crystal gazer, and a man
    who could perform miracles greater than Christ
    (121). Unfortunately for Faust, he was never able
    to bring about any of these miracles (unless one
    wants to argue that such a man achieving a good
    theological degree is a miracle in itself). The
    only documented facts that might have given him
    credibility as a wizard, among his bar mates,
    were things that now seem trivial.

6
  • These include such occurrences as his keeping a
    dog with him at meals (some of the sixteenth
    century general public considered demons to
    disguise themselves as dogs), his ability to
    occasionally obtain out-of-season game, and his
    threatening a group of monks with a poltergeist
    because they gave him bad wine. Whenever he would
    claim to bring someone back from the dead, he
    always needed a couple of days to prepare, no
    doubt to hire the right actors and create an
    eager audience.

7
  • Dr. Faust was not made famous and immortalized in
    literature by such authors as Marlowe because of
    amazing acts, but rather because his amazing
    amount of bragging caused false stories to become
    exaggerated over time. In truth, the real Faust
    sounds more like Shakespeare's comically boastful
    Falstaff than the respectable man unable to avoid
    temptation that Marlowe creates.
  • Faust's own legend did grow, however, to the
    point of his banishment from the city of
    Ingostadt for being a soothsayer. Faust brought
    this on himself though.

8
  • Unlike the Faustus in Marlowe's play, the real
    Faust went out of his way to inform people of his
    pact with the devil. According to Johannes Weir,
    Faust once came up to him and said, "I surely
    thought that you were my brother-in-law and
    therefore I looked at your feet to see whether
    long, curved claws projected from them" (124).
    Faust had to know that such a statement would not
    be taken lightly by many in the sixteenth
    century, a time connected with great fear of
    Satan.

9
Other Literary Sources
  • The theme of human being whose ambition and
    vision lead him or her to challenge or disobey a
    god is widespread in most cultures.

10
Your turn!
  • Can you think of any examples (religious or not)
    of human ambition leading to a challenge of God
    or gods?

11
Literary Sources
  • Marlowes play derives specifically from several
    of these
  • The Adam and Eve myth from the Judaeo-Christian
    tradition, is referred to in scene 1 Original
    sin is what the human race is supposed to have
    inherited from Adam.
  • The fall of Lucifer from heaven to hell as a
    punishment for wishing to be equal with God.
  • The Ancient Greek myth of Dedalus and Icarus,
    where Icarus disobeyed his fathers instructions
    and perished because he flew too high.
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