Incest, Drama and Nature's Law, 1550–1700
This is a full-length study of incest in English Renaissance and Restoration drama. Richard McCabe's comprehensive survey offers a literary history of this theme, informed by an investigation of the intellectual background, with particular emphasis on changing concepts of natural law, and consequent reassessments of classical tradition. It examines a wide range of theological, philosophical, legal and literary sources, in the context of modern psychological and sociological theories of family development. Extensive comparisons with classical models and contemporary European dramatists, from Tasso to Corneille and Racine, explore the volatile association between dramatic form and emotional content, structural experiment and sexual ambivalence. The centrality of the family to all human relationships, and the mutual reflection of familial politics and the patriarchal state make incest a powerful metaphor for the ambivalence of all concepts of 'natural' authority, and for various forms of social and political revolt.
- A comprehensive survey of the theme of incest in Renaissance and Restoration drama
- Combines trendy subject with detailed scholarship in literary and intellectual history
- Includes material of interest to intellectual and social historians, classicists and specialists in European Renaissance drama
Product details
October 2008Paperback
9780521088749
376 pages
230 × 160 × 21 mm
0.55kg
1 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Part I. Issues:
- 1. Mythical archetypes
- 2. Law and licence
- Part II. Plays:
- 3. Classical models
- 4. Sixteenth-century tragedy
- 5. Incest averted, the comic perspective
- 6. Shakespeare
- 7. Beaumont and Fletcher
- 8. Tragedy and atheism
- 9. Tragedy and melancholia
- 10. Dryden
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Index.