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Unknown
First published: March 1, 2026 - Last updated: March 1, 2026
TITLE INFORMATION
Author: Emma K. Atwood
Title: The Obscene ob skene
Subtitle: Offstage Sexual Violence in Early Modern Drama
In: Echoes of Violence on the Early Modern English Stage and Beyond
Edited by: Samantha Dressel and Matthew Carter
Place: London and New York
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2026
Pages: 55-76
Series: Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies
ISBN-13: 9781041114376 (hbk.) -
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Wikipedia,
WorldCat |
ISBN-13: 9781041114383 (pbk.) -
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Wikipedia,
WorldCat |
ISBN-13: 9781003659990 (ebk.) -
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Wikipedia,
WorldCat
Language: English
Keywords:
Modern History:
16th Century,
17th Century |
European History:
English History |
Representations:
Literary Texts /
Thomas Heywood,
Thomas Middleton,
William Rowley,
William Shakespeare
FULL TEXT
Links:
- Google Books (Limited Preview)
- Taylor & Francis Online (Restricted Access)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Author:
Emma K. Atwood,
Department of English & World Languages,
University of Montevallo -
Academia.edu,
ResearchGate
Abstracts:
-
»Emma K. Atwood’s “The Obscene ob skene: Offstage Sexual Violence in Early Modern Drama,” considers the (un)stageability of violent sexual acts. This piece uses close reading and dramaturgy to explore the way early modern playwrights heightened the effects of sexual violence through temporal and physical proximity.«
(Source: Samantha Dressel and Matthew Carter. »Introduction.« Echoes of Violence on the Early Modern English Stage and Beyond. Edited by Samantha Dressel et al. London 2026: 6)
-
»In William Shakespeare’s notoriously violent Titus Andronicus, approximately 115 lines elapse between the time Lavinia leaves the stage with her rapists and then returns, dismembered and ravished, her tongue cut out, her hands cut off, her body wholly abused and presented as a spectacle of interpretation. In a practical dramaturgical sense, 115 lines is not a very long time to accommodate this level of material change in costuming and makeup, not to mention the challenging mental transformation many actors might undertake to embody such a rapid character shift. But in comparison to other early modern performances of offstage sexual violence, 115 lines is a luxury. Thomas Middleton’s Women Beware Women gives Bianca 33 lines between the moment when the Duke’s aggressive sexual advances push her offstage and her return to the limelight, “unexpectedly beguiled” (2.2.394–5). Thomas Middleton and William Rowley’s The Changeling provides 24 lines of dialogue to account for Beatrice Joanna and De Flores’s violent and sexually charged encounter in an offstage closet. In perhaps the most extreme example, Thomas Heywood’s The Rape of Lucrece allows only 15 lines to transpire between Lucrece’s violent exit and her “unready” return; put another way, the eponymous act around which the entire play revolves takes only 15 lines to commit. Furthermore, these rapid encounters – whether elapsed for effect or intentionally brief – were perhaps even shorter than written when staged, following Joe Falocco’s convincing argument whereby early modern scripts were routinely cut for time and abridged in performance (Falocco 123). So, which dramatization of rape is more affective, or rather, more effective? 115 lines, or 15 lines? When considering the effect of offstage sexual violence, does the elapsed time matter?«
(Source: Taylor & Francis Online)
Reviews: -
Wikipedia:
History of Europe:
History of England /
Elizabethan era,
Stuart period |
Literature:
English literature /
Thomas Heywood,
Thomas Middleton,
William Rowley,
William Shakespeare |
Literature:
English literature /
The Changeling (play),
Titus Andronicus,
Women Beware Women |
Sex and the law:
Sexual violence
|