The Crime Scene of Revenge Tragedy: Sacrificial Cannibalism in Seneca's Thyestes and Shakespeare's Titus Andronieus

被引:0
作者
LaPerle, Carol Mejia [1 ]
机构
[1] Wright State Univ, Dept English Language & Literatures, Dayton, OH 45435 USA
来源
CONCENTRIC-LITERARY AND CULTURAL STUDIES | 2012年 / 38卷 / 01期
关键词
revenge tragedy; Bataille; Seneca; Thyestes; Shakespeare; Titus Andronicus; cannibalism;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
I0 [文学理论];
学科分类号
0501 ; 050101 ;
摘要
Analyzing the parallel gestures of ritualistic brutality deployed in the cannibal banquet of Seneca's Thyestes and Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, I reveal how the genre of revenge tragedies is simultaneously an instance of, and challenge to, Georges Bataille's socio-economic theory of excess within a general economy. Excess, and not scarcity, is the motive and the condition for revenge. Both revengers react to a surplus of energy, or what I will call the "excess of possibilities," that threatens autonomy. Thus, the victims of revenge embody the excess of possibilities in the plays since they are reminders of the contingency, and potential indistinguishability, of the agents of revenge. Sacrificial cannibalism emerges as the revenger's means for autonomous differentiation, thus eliminating the unbearable interchangeability generated by surplus. Furthermore, by theorizing the excess of possibilities as the underlying pressure driving Atreus as a Senecan revenge figure, I argue that the citation of a specifically Senecan cannibal banquet, appropriated in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, is a gesture by the author to sacrifice, and thus gratuitously consume, the surplus violence generated by the act of representation itself.
引用
收藏
页码:9 / 28
页数:20
相关论文
共 27 条
[11]  
Fox C, 2009, OVID AND THE POLITICS OF EMOTION IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND, P1, DOI 10.1057/9780230101654
[12]  
Girard Rene., 1991, A Theatre of Envy: William Shakespeare
[13]  
Henry Denis., 1985, MASK POWER SENECAS T
[14]  
Lobanov-Rostovsky Sergei, 1993, THESIS HARVARD U
[15]  
Mead Stephen, 1992, EXEMPLARIA, V6.2, P460
[16]  
Miola RobertS., 1992, SHAKESPEARE CLASSICA
[17]  
MIOLA RS, 1995, TITUS ANDRONICUS CRI, P195
[18]  
Reese JackE., 1970, Shakespeare Quarterly, V21, P77
[19]  
RimmonKenan Shlomith, 2002, Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics
[20]  
Robertson Karen., 2001, Representing Rape in Medieval and Early Modern Literature, P213