Skip to main content

Doctor Faustus

Doctor Faustus

Dr Roy Booth on Doctor Faustus

  1. Do not let your lack of sympathy for Faustus blunt critical engagement with the text.
  2. The narrative of Doctor Faustus allows Marlowe to express blasphemous concepts.
  3. The character of Faustus is based on the real-life man, Dr. Johann Georg Faust.
  4. Contemporary performances of Faustus tend to lack the risk involved in Marlowe’s own time. Students need to be aware of how exciting and challenging the play can be.
  5. Watch Silviu Purcărete’s take on Doctor Faustus to get a sense of the type of danger that can be involved within an interpretation of the play.
  • Faust. My heart’s so hard’ned I cannot repent.
    Scarce can I name salvation, faith, or heaven,
    But fearful echoes thunder in mine ears
    “Faustus, thou art damn’d!”’
    Doctor Faustus, Scene VI, II.20 – 23
  • ‘Now go not backward: no, Faustus, be resolute.
    Why waverest thou? O, something soundeth in mine ears
    “Abjure this magic, turn to God again!”’
    Doctor Faustus, Scene V, ll.8 – 10
  • Scene V, Lines 1 – 15
  • Scene VI, Lines 20 - 40
  • Bartels, Emily C. 'Authorizing Subversion: Strategies of Power in Marlowe's Doctor Faustus', Renaissance Papers, (1989): 65-74.
  • Brooke, Nicholas. “The Moral Tragedy of Doctor Faustus”. Cambridge Journal 5 (1952): 662-87.
    The most thoroughly Satanic reading of the play is in this lamentably hard-to-find essay by Nicholas Brooke, where the play is read as Faustus’ inverted morality play, a quest to reach hell and resist all the temptations set out by heaven.
  • Greenblatt, Stephen. ‘Marlowe and the Will to Absolute Play.’ In Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare. By Stephen Greenblatt, 193–221. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980.
  • Halpern, Richard. ‘Marlowe's Theater of Night: Doctor Faustus and Capital’, ELH  71 (2004): 455-495.
  • Hamlin, William H. ‘“Swolne with Cunning of a Selfe Conceit”: Marlowe's Faustus and Self-Conception’, English Language Notes, 34 (1996): 7-12.
  • Hamlin, William M. ‘Casting Doubt in Marlowe's "Doctor Faustus", Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 41 (2001): 257-275.
  • Hattaway, Michael. ‘The Theology of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus’, Renaissance Drama, N.S. 3 (1970): 51-78.
  • Minshull, Catherine. ‘The Dissident Subtext of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus’, English: The Journal of the English Association, 39 (1990): 193-207. 

Explore Royal Holloway

Arrivals Sept 2017 77 1.jpg

Get help paying for your studies at Royal Holloway through a range of scholarships and bursaries.

clubs-societies_REDUCED.jpg

There are lots of exciting ways to get involved at Royal Holloway. Discover new interests and enjoy existing ones.

Accommodation home hero

Heading to university is exciting. Finding the right place to live will get you off to a good start.

Support and wellbeing 2022 teaser.jpg

Whether you need support with your health or practical advice on budgeting or finding part-time work, we can help.

Founders, clock tower, sky, ornate

Discover more about our academic departments and schools.

REF_2021.png

Find out why Royal Holloway is in the top 25% of UK universities for research rated ‘world-leading’ or ‘internationally excellent’.

Immersive Technology

Royal Holloway is a research intensive university and our academics collaborate across disciplines to achieve excellence.

volunteering 10th tenth Anniversary Sculpture - research.jpg

Discover world-class research at Royal Holloway.

First years Emily Wilding Davison Building front view

Discover more about who we are today, and our vision for the future.

RHC PH.100.1.3 Founders south east 1886.w

Royal Holloway began as two pioneering colleges for the education of women in the 19th century, and their spirit lives on today.

Notable alumni Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay

We’ve played a role in thousands of careers, some of them particularly remarkable.

Governance

Find about our decision-making processes and the people who lead and manage Royal Holloway today.