81 research outputs found
âFright the ladies out of their witsâ: Gendered passion and the English stage
This essay discusses female spectatorship from within Shakespeareâs plays as performed in his lifetime. Several plays such as A Midsummer Nightâs Dream, Hamlet or King Lear address the issue of female spectatorship, providing comedic and tragic illustrations of how women reacted to theatrical performances, and how playwrights seemed to address the needs of female spectators. Interpretation of female spectatorship is rendered difficult by the scant evidence pertaining to actual women spectators at the time, pointing to the problem of interpreting how such spectatorship and gendered emotions could be performed and received by Elizabethan and Jacobean audiences. The essay shows that gendered constructs of spectatorship rarely followed accepted norms, and that men were as likely as women to be frightened âout of their witsâ. The plays are as fictional as the gendered differences between female and male spectators
Subscription and proscription in Marloweâs Edward II
The celebrated amphibolic letter in Christopher Marloweâs Edward II which, left âunpointedâ, both saves and kills the King is the last of a long list of pieces of writing in the play. This paper will bring into focus the manner in which the final coup de thĂ©Ăątre is prepared by earlier acts of writing, notably by repeated efforts by characters to convince others to âsubscribe [their] namesâ to writs ordering the proscription of perceived enemies of the realm. It first shows how the various references to (acts of) writing in Edward II are the fruit of material peculiarities found in Marloweâs narrative sources (Holinshed, Foxe, Stow), lending the play a semblance of historical verisimilitude. Letters, however, also serve a host of specifically dramatic purposes, contributing to underline key structural elements in the play and serving as props capable of inflicting physical wounds. But if these letters may have a life of their own, producing meaning or provoking pain, they are also the result of an act of writing. Studying the lettersâ agency helps reflect the shifting allegiances both in and outside of the play, illustrating Marloweâs struggle between the public and private âhandâ, between policy and passion, belonging and exile, subscription and proscription
La nuit genrĂ©e ou lâobscure clartĂ© des scĂšnes anglaises
Gendered night, or the nocturnal brightness of the early modern English stage
In French, critics speak of the night using feminine terms, but the term is grammatically neutral in English. Despite this neutrality, night may be gendered. In Romeo and Juliet, virgins hide their shame from their lovers by hiding in the dark. If night is consecrated for love games, it is also a time for death. In Macbeth, Satan acts in media nocte, and Lady Macbeth calls on night and the « ministers of hell » to murder in secret. Carpe noctem. This paper will discuss the different loci used in Elizabethan and early Jacobean drama, as well as the different literary genres, to describe the rich variety of the playsâ gendered nocturnal landscapes. The Shakespearean « gendered » night may prove more revealing than plain daylight
Introduction
La SociĂ©tĂ© française Shakespeare a Ă©tĂ© fondĂ©e en 1975. La mĂȘme annĂ©e, Juliet Dusinberre publiait son ouvrage Shakespeare and the Nature of Women. Dans son sillage, des critiques ont commencĂ© Ă interroger la notion de genre dans lâĆuvre de Shakespeare et de ses contemporains, mettant en lumiĂšre ses aspects poĂ©tiques, discursifs, politiques et performatifs, qui contribuent Ă faire encore et toujours de Shakespeare notre contemporain.La liste dâouvrages qui ont marquĂ© les Ă©tudes shakespearienne..
The sweet which is their poisonâ: of venom, envy and vanity in Coriolanus
Contrary to other plays in which references to poison clearly refer to mortal potions and assassination plots, Coriolanus offers no such thing. Poison is only taken in a figura- tive sense â and yet, the poison in the play is poisonous, infecting not the body natural, but the body politic, underlining the deep-rooted link between poison and envy, or Invidia. I take the question of poison and the way in which poison affects, or infects, the body politic to be a metaphor for what happens when one attempts to weigh oneâs merits, or give (away) oneâs voice. This will, in turn, allow me to argue that, if Coriolanus is often said to lack rhetorical flourishes commonly found elsewhere in Shakespeare, it is perhaps because Coriolanusâ fabled lack of oratorical skills is here set as a model against the âVanitie of Wordsâ, to counterpoise âthe sweet which is [our] poisonâ (III.1.159)
Du dĂ©tournement au dĂ©lire interprĂ©tatif : les figures de lâexcĂšs dans Julius Caesar de Shakespeare
La figure de lâexcĂšs, prise dans ses multiples sens dâĂ©cart, de mort, de dĂ©passement, voire de ravissement, imprĂšgne la Rome de Shakespeare. Les excĂšs de CĂ©sar sont multiples : ayant franchi le Rubicon et sâĂ©tant rendu maĂźtre de Rome, il passe au rang des dieux ; aprĂšs sa mort, il revient pour prĂ©dire la mort de Brutus, outrepassant une fois de plus les limites du naturel. Ă ceci, il faut ajouter les excĂšs du dramaturge lui-mĂȘme : Shakespeare met en scĂšne encore plus de signes prĂ©monitoires que nâen comportent ses sources. En se dĂ©marquant ainsi (notamment de Plutarque), Shakespeare ne cherche-t-il pas Ă mettre en Ă©vidence combien il est difficile de circonscrire les dangers inhĂ©rents aux phĂ©nomĂšnes prophĂ©tiques ou divinatoires ? Les pratiques divinatoires de la citĂ© antique permettent en effet de (rĂ©)interprĂ©ter indĂ©finiment les signes et prodiges offerts par les dieux, au risque de sombrer dans un dĂ©lire interprĂ©tatif. Câest ainsi que les ides de mars peuvent devenir tour Ă tour les « sides », « tides » ou « dogs » dâun dieu ou dâune plĂšbe en courroux... comme lorsque, dans un moment de dĂ©lire, ou « slip », Antoine se met Ă prophĂ©tiser : il invoque alors le fantĂŽme de CĂ©sar et the « dogs of war » du dieu de la guerre, Mars, aux ides du mois Ă©ponyme. Le chaos qui sâensuit est Ă lâimage du dĂ©lire interprĂ©tatif que nous nous proposons dâexaminer.Shakespeareâs Rome is nothing but excessâexcess as Ă©cart, death or even rapture. Caesar exceeds, or crosses, multiple boundaries: after having entered Rome with his army and taken hold of the city, he becomes a living god; after his death, he returns to predict the death of Brutus as a ghost, flouting the laws of Nature. To this, we must add the playwrightâs excess: Shakespeare includes more omens than attested in his sources. By thus breaking with his forebears (notably Plutarch), the dramatist may have wished to point out the inherent difficulties in circumscribing the dangers of interpreting prophetic or divinatory phenomena. The divinatory practices of ancient Rome make it possible to indefinitely (re)interepret signs and wonders sent by the gods, at the risk of interpreting too much. Thus, the Ides of March also refer to the âsidesâ, âtidesâ and even the âdogsâ of an irate crowd or deity... such as when, in a moment of madness, or âslipâ, Antony prophesies, invoking Caesarâs ghost and the âdogs of warâ of the god of war, Mars, on the ides of the month named after him, March. The ensuing chaos is the excess this paper wishes to examine
Introduction
The French Shakespeare Society was founded in 1975. That same year, Juliet Dusinberre published her book Shakespeare and the Nature of Women. In her wake, critics began to question in earnest the notion of gender in the work of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, highlighting its poetic, discursive, political and performative aspects, which make Shakespeare our contemporary still.The list of studies that have left their mark on Shakespearean criticism in recent decades is extensive, embracin..
Du dĂ©tournement au dĂ©lire interprĂ©tatif : les figures de lâexcĂšs dans Julius Caesar de Shakespeare
Shakespeareâs Rome is nothing but excessâexcess as Ă©cart, death or even rapture. Caesar exceeds, or crosses, multiple boundaries: after having entered Rome with his army and taken hold of the city, he becomes a living god; after his death, he returns to predict the death of Brutus as a ghost, flouting the laws of Nature. To this, we must add the playwrightâs excess: Shakespeare includes more omens than attested in his sources. By thus breaking with his forebears (notably Plutarch), the dramatist may have wished to point out the inherent difficulties in circumscribing the dangers of interpreting prophetic or divinatory phenomena. The divinatory practices of ancient Rome make it possible to indefinitely (re)interepret signs and wonders sent by the gods, at the risk of interpreting too much. Thus, the Ides of March also refer to the âsidesâ, âtidesâ and even the âdogsâ of an irate crowd or deity... such as when, in a moment of madness, or âslipâ, Antony prophesies, invoking Caesarâs ghost and the âdogs of warâ of the god of war, Mars, on the ides of the month named after him, March. The ensuing chaos is the excess this paper wishes to examine
Introduction
Comme le rappelle Maurizio Calbi, Shakespeare demeure une présence spectrale dans la culture contemporaine. Deux ans aprÚs avoir consacré son congrÚs annuel à « Shakespeare aprÚs Shakespeare », la Société Française Shakespeare a choisi de répondre à une question lancinante : comment Shakespeare a-t-il été construit, que ce soit « enchaßné » par la reliure des premiers in-quartos et in-folios de ses piÚces, ou au sens figuré, contraint par la culture de la premiÚre modernité, et comment Shakes..
âMy bliss is mixed with bitter gallâ: gross confections in Arden of Faversham
What might strike some as Arden of Favershamâs faulty construction may perhaps be ascribed to the fact that Ardenâs murderers, as well as the playâs audience, had to learn how to âtemper poisonâ (i.229). Poison is not simply a means to commit murder, its use also requires great dexterity, one which must be interpreted within a historical and metatheatrical context. The ineffectual use of poison lays the foundation for what is to come: a play in which murder becomes a laughing matter
- âŠ