Jonson in West Africa: A study of the elements of Jonsonian comedy in the plays of Soyinka and Sutherland
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University of Cape Coast
Abstract
The originality of this research is primarily grounded in its comparative nature
with its substantial focus on the Renaissance English dramatist, Jonson and two
West African dramatists, Soyinka and Sutherland. The study seeks to respond to a
gap in comparative research which for a long time has been confined to studying
the elements associated with Jonson’s comedy on other European writers, but
rarely on West African dramatists. The thesis investigates the relationship
between Soyinka and Sutherland, on the one hand, and Jonson, on the other hand,
in terms of their artistic choices, thematology, and stylistic modes; and also
examines what echoes, semblances and parallels which exist between them, as
dramatized in some selected plays of the three dramatists. The study draws
interpretive insights from Bloom’s poetics in his Anxiety of Influence, The New
Historicism Theory, Frye’s views on archetypes and Eliot’s idea of tradition in his
essay, “Tradition and the Individual Talent” to shed light on whether modern
twentieth century writers’ art and skills are mere echoes of their predecessors or
they demonstrate their distinct individual talents. The findings from the study
establish that the three dramatists utilize a common archetype of the trickster
image as the sub-structure of their plays as well as their individual choices and
stylistic modes converge in the timeless tradition of literary production to express
a confluence of their aesthetic energies. The thesis concludes that the West
African dramatists selects tropes and ideas from the realities of their sociocultural environments to express their distinct originality, for they did not imitate
Jonson’s craft.
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vii,232p;ll
