Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Reconstructing the Bower of Bliss: Homoerotic Myth-Making in The Faerie Queene
- Ovid, Lucretius, and the Grounded Goddess in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis
- The Soul as Commodity: Materialism in Doctor Faustus
- Antipholus and the Exorcists: The Acts of the Apostles in Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors
- Paul's Cross Churchyard and Shakespeare's Verona Youth
- The Summoning of Hamlet and Lear
- “Bred Now of Your Mud”: Land, Generation, and Maternity in Antony and Cleopatra
- Cosmetic Blackness: East Indies Trade, Gender, and The Devil's Law-Case
- From One Marvell to Another: Puritan Logic in “To His Coy Mistress”
- “An Heap Is Form'd into an Alphabet”: Thomas Blount's Sociable Lexicography
- Getting Past the Ellipsis: The Spirit and Urania in Paradise Lost
The Soul as Commodity: Materialism in Doctor Faustus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Reconstructing the Bower of Bliss: Homoerotic Myth-Making in The Faerie Queene
- Ovid, Lucretius, and the Grounded Goddess in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis
- The Soul as Commodity: Materialism in Doctor Faustus
- Antipholus and the Exorcists: The Acts of the Apostles in Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors
- Paul's Cross Churchyard and Shakespeare's Verona Youth
- The Summoning of Hamlet and Lear
- “Bred Now of Your Mud”: Land, Generation, and Maternity in Antony and Cleopatra
- Cosmetic Blackness: East Indies Trade, Gender, and The Devil's Law-Case
- From One Marvell to Another: Puritan Logic in “To His Coy Mistress”
- “An Heap Is Form'd into an Alphabet”: Thomas Blount's Sociable Lexicography
- Getting Past the Ellipsis: The Spirit and Urania in Paradise Lost
Summary
The well-known premise of Doctor Faustus is that Faustas trades his soul in return for twenty-four years of pleasure served up by Mephostophilis. To judge from the state of scholarly discussion, the fact that this premise is essentially economic in nature goes without saying. But because it has gone without saying, the implications of the play's economic underpinning have likewise gone unexamined. For obvious reasons, critical analysis has focused largely on the play's relation to religious orthodoxy of its time. I propose to look instead at Marlowe's portrayal, in the person of Faustus, of a perspective that, void of any sense of the spiritual, in effect denies the soul any status other than that of commodity. Faustus's commodification of his soul, and the attendant market logic which for us rings so prophetically, is only the most egregious example of his characteristic materialism. The very conception of giving one's soul in trade, after all, exemplifies a reified view of the soul; for Faustus, his soul is a thing—a commodity that he has in surplus and that he will trade in return for goods he lacks. Faustus's reification of his soul extends logically to his sense of the soul as a thing that he owns and that he can dispense with as he wishes: “is not thy soule thine owne?” Faustus asks himself, giving explicit voice to his mistaken sense of property and possession (2.1.457).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Renaissance Papers 2012 , pp. 21 - 30Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013