Doctor Faustus: With The English Faust Book

"This is an excellent edition; I really appreciate the clear Introduction and the exceptionally useful notes.  I look forward to using this text with a freshman literature class who will really benefit from the helpful textual apparatus." —Charlotte England, Department of English, Salisbury University

"The inexpensive paperback will allow this student-friendly text to be added to the reading list of a variety of high-school and college courses. Teachers as well as students will find the Introduction here very useful." —Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance

SKU
26361g

Christopher Marlowe
Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by David Wootton

2005 - 192 pp.

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Paper 978-0-87220-729-5
$11.50
Instructor Examination (Review) Copy 978-0-87220-729-5
$1.00

eBook available for $8.50. Click HERE for more information.

This edition of Doctor Faustus features annotated versions, with modernized spelling and punctuation, of the 1604 "A-text" and the 1592 text of Marlowe's source, the English Faust Book—a translation of the best-selling Historia von Johann Fausten published in Frankfurt in 1587, which recounts the strange story of Doctor John Faustus and his pact with the spirit Mephistopheles.

David Wootton's Introduction charts Marlowe's brief, meteoric career; the delicate social and political climate in which Doctor Faustus was staged and the vexed question of the religious sensibilities to which it may have catered; the interpretive significance of variations between the "A" and "B" texts; and the shrewd and subversive uses to which Marlowe put the English Faust Book in crafting, according to Wootton, "a drama in which orthodox Christian teaching triumphed, but in which Faustus has all the best lines."

Reviews:

"This is an excellent edition; I really appreciate the clear Introduction and the exceptionally useful notes.  I look forward to using this text with a freshman literature class who will really benefit from the helpful textual apparatus."
     —Charlotte England, Department of English, Salisbury University
 

"The inexpensive paperback will allow this student-friendly text to be added to the reading list of a variety of high-school and college courses.  Teachers as well as students will find the Introduction here very useful."
     —Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance

About the Author:

David Wootton is Anniversary Professor of History, University of York.