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  2. Alchemy in art and entertainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alchemy_in_art_and...

    A much later example of this can be found in The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz (1616). In the second category are critiques of alchemical charlatanism. Starting in the fourteenth century, some writers lampooned alchemists and used them as the butt of satirical attacks. Some early and well-known examples are:

  3. Comedy of humours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comedy_of_humours

    The satiric purpose of the comedy of humours and its realistic method led to more serious character studies with Jonson’s 1610 play The Alchemist. The name derives from the then-prevalent concept of bodily humours that controlled emotional disposition, but were also associated with psychological characteristics; [ 2 ] the result was a system ...

  4. The Alchemist (play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Alchemist_(play)

    David Garrick as Abel Drugger in Jonson's The Alchemist by Johann Zoffany (c. 1770). The Alchemist is a comedy by English playwright Ben Jonson.First performed in 1610 by the King's Men, it is generally considered Jonson's best and most characteristic comedy; Samuel Taylor Coleridge believed that it had one of the three most perfect plots in literature.

  5. City comedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_comedy

    The closest that William Shakespeare's plays come to the genre is the slightly earlier The Merry Wives of Windsor (c. 1597), which is his only play set entirely in England; it avoids the caustic satire of city comedy, however, in preference for a more bourgeois mode (with its dual romantic plots governed by socio-economics not love or sex ...

  6. Bartholomew Fair (play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartholomew_Fair_(play)

    Zeal-of-the-land Busy is Jonson's second foray, after The Alchemist ' s Tribulation and Ananais, into a field of satire common in Jacobean drama: satire against Puritans. Various factors combined to make the godly or "precisians" obvious targets of ridicule.

  7. Cynthia's Revels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynthia's_Revels

    Cynthia's Revels, or The Fountain of Self-Love is a late Elizabethan stage play, a satire written by Ben Jonson. The play was one element in the Poetomachia or War of the Theatres between Jonson and rival playwrights John Marston and Thomas Dekker.

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  9. List of satirical films - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_satirical_films

    This is a list of films that incorporate satire or were described as such. Made-for-television and animated films are also included. Made-for-television and animated films are also included. Title