Q)-What is comedy of manners? Describe its characteristics?
Comedy of manners is a form of dramatic comedy that depicts
and often satirizes the manners and affectations of contemporary society.
It is mainly a satirical comedy of the Restoration period (1660–1700)
that questions and comments upon the manners and social norms of a greatly
sophisticated, artificial society.
Indeed, the comedy of manners of the Restoration appears to
have nothing much original in its plot or character. What has characterized it,
in particular, is the atmosphere which could hardly be precisely analysed. The
plot has the story of love and intrigue and characters are dominated by witty
youths and old dames, and these are the least of the innovations made by the
Restoration comedians and commonly found in the Jonsonian comedy of humour. Yet,
there are seen certain features that have created the gay and free, witty, and
satiric atmosphere of the comedy of manners.
In the first place, the comedy of manners represents social
life, of course, confined to a narrow circle. The social manners, depicted in
the comedy of manners, do not belong, as in the comedy of humour, to the people
in masses but to the snobbish, artificial, well-to-do society of the
Restoration community. In fact, the social environment, represented in this
type of comedy, is wholly aristocratic, but definitely superficial. The
playwriter seems to be concerned with the cultivated upper-class ethos that is
amoral.
In the second place, the comedy of manners excels in the
creation of dramatic situations as well as dramatic suspense. Love, treated in
the play, has little to do with romance or idealism but is mainly sustained
with wit, realism, and intrigue.
In the third place, the characters of the comedy of manners
belong to the real life of the 18th century–to the artificial, snobbish, vulgar
English society. They are realistic, although they belong to a much restricted
social span. In fact, the imitation of a distinct class- aristocratic but
immoral- constitutes the essence of the comedy of manners.
The comedy of manners of the restoration, again, deals with
intellect and has little emotion or impulsiveness. Instead of the emotional
love of youth of the romantic comedy, the Restoration comedy is packed with
highly enjoyable repartees of wit and the frank display of social depravity. This,
no doubt, treats love, but this treatment is from an acutely conscious
intellectual angle. Love is here more a matter of intellect than of impulse,
more of external consideration than of internal feelings.
In the next place, the Restoration comedies are found to
have a satirical note. But that note of satire is not curative and clinical,
but sardonic and cynical. This is a part of the intellectual character of the
play.
The Restoration comedy of manners has, no doubt, a certain
amount of immorality and vulgarity. There is certainly a good deal of dialogue
or statement in the Restoration comedy of manners which oversteps all bounds of
decency and of good taste. Even some scenes smack immodesty and vulgarity. But
all this is found to be the inevitable effect of the close relation between
comedy and society. The restoration society was licentious, and the drama, that
professed to represent the same, could not but be licentious.
This comedy, based on common sense and social reality, is in
plain prose, witty and diverting, and not in the high flown verses of the
Elizabethan comedy. This prose has a direct, straightforward approach.
Though the root of the Restoration comedy of manners might
be traced in Dryden, the famous makers of this comedy were to come much later.
They included William Congreve, George Etherege, William Wycherley, John
Vanbrugh, and George Farquhar.
Some of the most famous examples of comedy of manners are
William Congreve’s The Way of the World, William Wycherley’s The
Country Wife, R.B.Sheridan’s The Rivals, The School for
Scandal, etc.
Comedy of Manners Characteristics
It depends upon the dramatists’ capacity to present the
unemotional treatment of sex.
It is rich with wit and satire and gives the image of the
time.
The heroine is more important and interesting than the hero
in the Comedy of Manners
Both hero and heroine are well dressed, self-possessed and
witty.
Whereas throughout its long career, English Tragedy has
always accepted foreign influences, English Comedy has been less influenced by
them. But Restoration Comedy of Manners took a good deal of continental spirit.
The manners which the Comedy of Manners shows were not the
manners of all the classes of Restoration Society; they were rather the manners
of the upper class only.
This genre is characterized by realism (art), social
analysis and satire. These comedies held a mirror to the finer society of their
age. These comedies are thus true pictures of the noble society of the age.
One feature of the Restoration comedy which has been often
criticised and almost as often defended is its immorality.
This genre held a mirror to the high society of
the Restoration Age. The society was immortal and so was its image
represented by the comedy.
Most comedy writers liked the presentation of scenes and
acts of sexual rudeness.
The introduction of the actresses for the first time on the
stage lowered the morality level. These actresses were mostly women of easy
virtue.
The writers of the Comedy of Manners gave much more
importance to the wit and polish of their dialogues than to their
plot-construction; which, in the views of Aristotle, “is the soul of a tragedy
and a comedy too.”
The dialogue of the Comedy of Manners is witty, polished and
crisp.
The Way of the World by William Congreve is an example
of Comedy of Manners
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