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born 1640, Harbledown, Kent - died April 16, 1689, London
born 1640, Harbledown, Kent - died April 16, 1689, London  
English dramatist, fiction writer, and poet who was the first Englishwoman known to earn her living by writing.


[[Image:aphra.jpg]]
[[Image:aphra.jpg]]
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= '''Life''' =
= '''Life''' =


Her origin remains a mystery, in part because Behn may have deliberately obscured her early life. One tradition identifies Behn as the child known only as Ayfara or Aphra who traveled in the 1650s with a couple named Amis to Suriname, which was then an English possession. She was more likely the daughter of a barber, Bartholomew Johnson, who may or may not have sailed with her and the rest of her family to Suriname in 1663. She returned to England in 1664 and married a merchant named Behn; he died (or the couple separated) soon after. Her wit and talent having brought her into high esteem, she was employed by King Charles II in secret service in the Netherlands in 1666. Unrewarded and briefly imprisoned for debt, she began to write to support herself.  
Aphra Behn’s early life remains a mystery even to this day. She may have been the child of a family called Amis who, together with their child “Ayfara” or “Aphra” went to Surinam in South America in the 1650s. The second possibility is that she was the daughter of the barber Bartholomew Johnson who also went to Surinam in 1663 with his family .  
She returned to England in the following year and married a merchant named Behn. Since he died (or the two separated) soon afterwards, Behn had to earn her own money and worked for King Charles II in the secret service in the Netherlands in 1666. After a brief imprisonment and due to heavy debts, she started her writing career.  




= '''Works''' =
= '''Works''' =
1670 -- ''The Forced Marriage''
1671 -- ''The Amourous Prince''
1672 -- ''Covent Garden Drollery'' (probably edited by Behn)
1673 -- ''The Dutch Lover''
1675 -- Possible plays by Behn: ''The Revenge: Or a Match in Newgate'', and ''The Woman Turned Bully''
1676 –- ''Abdelazer'', ''The Town Fop''
1677 -- ''The Rover'' (March), ''The Debauchee'' (February) and ''The Counterfeit Bridegroom'' (September)
1678 -- ''Sir Patient Fancy'' (January)
1679 -- ''The Feigned Courtesans'' (spring), ''The Young King'' (fall) 
1681 -- The Second Part of ''The Rover'', ''The False Count'' (November) and ''The Roundheads'' (December)
1682 -- ''The City Heiress'' (spring), ''Like Father, Like Son''
1683 -- Publication of the first part of ''Love Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister''
1684 -- Publication of ''Poems on Several Occasions''
1685 -- Publication of ''Miscellany''
1686 -- Publication of ''The Lover's Watch'', ''The Lucky Chance''
1687 -- ''The Emperor of the Moon'' (March)
1688 -- Publication of prose fiction works: ''The Fair Jilt'', ''Agnes de Castro'' and ''Oroonoko''


=== '''Drama''' ===
=== '''Drama''' ===


Behn's early works were tragicomedies in verse. In 1670 her first play, ''The Forc'd Marriage'', was produced, and ''The Amorous Prince'' followed a year later. Her sole tragedy, ''Abdelazer'', was staged in 1676. However, she turned increasingly to light comedy and farce over the course of the 1670s. Many of these witty and vivacious comedies, notably ''The Rover'' (two parts, produced 1677 and 1681), were commercially successful. ''The Rover'' depicts the adventures of a small group of English Cavaliers in Madrid and Naples during the exile of the future Charles II. ''The Emperor of the Moon'', first performed in 1687, presaged the harlequinade, a form of comic theatre that evolved into the English pantomime.
Behn’s first plays were two tragicomedyies called ''The Forced Marriage'', produced in 1670 and ''The Amorous Prince'' in 1671 .  Afterwards followed “The Dutch Lover” and possibly three more plays before she wrote her sole tragedy, ''Abdelazer'', which was staged in 1676 . Thereafter she preferred writing light comedy and farce, like ''The Rover''. Her last play was  ''The Emperor of the Moon'', which was performed in 1687.
Her comedies are remarkable because they did not treat masculine and feminine behaviour but serious problems in incompatible marriages, like love and money. In some of her works love justifies illegal actions (by men and women)




=== '''Fiction''' ===
=== '''Fiction''' ===


Her short novel ''Oroonoko'' (1688) tells the story of an enslaved African prince whom Behn claimed to have known in South America. Its engagement with the themes of slavery, race, and gender, as well as its influence on the development of the English novel, helped to make it, by the turn of the 21st century, her best-known work. Behn's other fiction includes the multipart epistolary novel ''Love-Letters Between a Nobleman'' and ''His Sister'' (1684–87) and ''The Fair Jilt'' (1688).
Her only short novel ''Oroonoko'' was published in 1688 . It tells the story of an enslaved prince from Africa whom Aphra Behn claims to have known. Its contemporary themes like slavery, race, and gender helped to make it Behn’s best known work. Others include the epistolary novels ''Love-Letters Between a Nobleman'' and ''His Sister'' (1684–87), which were the first epistolary novel in English literature .


=== '''Poetry''' ===
=== '''Poetry''' ===


Behn's versatility, like her output, was immense; she wrote other popular works of fiction, and she often adapted works by older dramatists. She also wrote poetry, the bulk of which was collected in ''Poems upon Several Occasions'', with ''A Voyage to the Island of Love'' (1684) and ''Lycidus''; or, ''The Lover in Fashion'' (1688). Behn's charm and generosity won her a wide circle of friends, and her relative freedom as a professional writer, as well as the subject matter of her works, made her the object of some scandal.
Behn also wrote poetry successfully and published the majority of her poems in a collection called ''Poems upon Several Occasions'' in 1684.


= '''Sources''' =
= '''Sources''' =


"Behn, Aphra." ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 23 Apr. 2009   
Gill, Pat: “Gender, Sexuality, and Marriage” in The Cambridge Companion to English Restoration Theatre. Ed. P. Payne Fisk. Cambridge: CUP, 2003. 
Howe, Elizabeth: The First English Actresses. Women and Drama 1660-1700. Cambridge: CUP, 1993
Korninger, Siegfried: The Restoration Period and the eighteenth century. 1660 – 1780.München: Österreichischer Bundesverlag Wien, 1964.
Nestvold, Ruth: ''The Aphra Behn Page'' 07 May 2009
[http://www.lit-arts.net/Behn/chron-ab.htm]
"Behn, Aphra." ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 23 Apr. 2009   
[http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-9014136]
[http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-9014136]

Revision as of 15:31, 7 May 2009

Behn, Aphra

born 1640, Harbledown, Kent - died April 16, 1689, London

Life

Aphra Behn’s early life remains a mystery even to this day. She may have been the child of a family called Amis who, together with their child “Ayfara” or “Aphra” went to Surinam in South America in the 1650s. The second possibility is that she was the daughter of the barber Bartholomew Johnson who also went to Surinam in 1663 with his family . She returned to England in the following year and married a merchant named Behn. Since he died (or the two separated) soon afterwards, Behn had to earn her own money and worked for King Charles II in the secret service in the Netherlands in 1666. After a brief imprisonment and due to heavy debts, she started her writing career.


Works

1670 -- The Forced Marriage 1671 -- The Amourous Prince 1672 -- Covent Garden Drollery (probably edited by Behn) 1673 -- The Dutch Lover 1675 -- Possible plays by Behn: The Revenge: Or a Match in Newgate, and The Woman Turned Bully 1676 –- Abdelazer, The Town Fop 1677 -- The Rover (March), The Debauchee (February) and The Counterfeit Bridegroom (September) 1678 -- Sir Patient Fancy (January) 1679 -- The Feigned Courtesans (spring), The Young King (fall) 1681 -- The Second Part of The Rover, The False Count (November) and The Roundheads (December) 1682 -- The City Heiress (spring), Like Father, Like Son 1683 -- Publication of the first part of Love Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister 1684 -- Publication of Poems on Several Occasions 1685 -- Publication of Miscellany 1686 -- Publication of The Lover's Watch, The Lucky Chance 1687 -- The Emperor of the Moon (March) 1688 -- Publication of prose fiction works: The Fair Jilt, Agnes de Castro and Oroonoko


Drama

Behn’s first plays were two tragicomedyies called The Forced Marriage, produced in 1670 and The Amorous Prince in 1671 . Afterwards followed “The Dutch Lover” and possibly three more plays before she wrote her sole tragedy, Abdelazer, which was staged in 1676 . Thereafter she preferred writing light comedy and farce, like The Rover. Her last play was The Emperor of the Moon, which was performed in 1687. Her comedies are remarkable because they did not treat masculine and feminine behaviour but serious problems in incompatible marriages, like love and money. In some of her works love justifies illegal actions (by men and women)


Fiction

Her only short novel Oroonoko was published in 1688 . It tells the story of an enslaved prince from Africa whom Aphra Behn claims to have known. Its contemporary themes like slavery, race, and gender helped to make it Behn’s best known work. Others include the epistolary novels Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister (1684–87), which were the first epistolary novel in English literature .

Poetry

Behn also wrote poetry successfully and published the majority of her poems in a collection called Poems upon Several Occasions in 1684.

Sources

Gill, Pat: “Gender, Sexuality, and Marriage” in The Cambridge Companion to English Restoration Theatre. Ed. P. Payne Fisk. Cambridge: CUP, 2003. Howe, Elizabeth: The First English Actresses. Women and Drama 1660-1700. Cambridge: CUP, 1993 Korninger, Siegfried: The Restoration Period and the eighteenth century. 1660 – 1780.München: Österreichischer Bundesverlag Wien, 1964. Nestvold, Ruth: The Aphra Behn Page 07 May 2009 [1]

"Behn, Aphra." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 23 Apr. 2009  

[2]