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Unknown
First published: July 1, 2024 - Last updated: July 1, 2024
TITLE INFORMATION
Author: Kimberly Huth
Title: “This Forcèd League”
Subtitle: The Compassionate Body in The Rape of Lucrece
Journal: Renaissance and Reformation - Renaissance et Réforme
Volume: 47
Issue: 1
Year: Winter 2024
Pages: 137-167
pISSN: 0034-429X -
Find a Library: WorldCat |
eISSN: 2293-7374 -
Find a Library: WorldCat
Language: English
Keywords:
Ancient History:
Roman History;
Modern History:
17th Century |
European History:
English History |
Cases:
Mythological Offenders /
Sextus Tarquinius;
Cases:
Mythological Victims /
Lucretia;
Types:
Rape
Representations:
Literary Texts /
William Shakespeare
FULL TEXT
Links:
- Érudit (Restricted Access)
- University of Toronto Libraries (Restricted Access)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Author:
Kimberly Huth,
English Department,
California State University, Dominguez Hills
Abstract:
»Two models of compassion coexisted in early modern English thinking: one characterized fellow-feeling as a form of contagion that physically compelled the sharing of passions through the humoral body; the other saw compassion as a moral exercise that required deliberate encouragement and active practice. This paper argues that Shakespeare’s The Rape of Lucrece demonstrates the dynamic interaction of these two models, situating Lucrece’s post-rape failures of productive compassionate interaction as the consequence of the changes produced in her body by the force of Tarquin’s passion, imparted to her through the event of the rape. By tracing Shakespeare’s poetic anatomy of the compassionate body through the rhetoric of opposition in the poem, this analysis elucidates how the construction of gender in humoral theory shapes the narration of the rape and exhibits the enduring influence of the humoral body on the period’s understanding of social life.«
(Source: Renaissance and Reformation)
Wikipedia:
Ancient history:
Ancient Rome |
History of Europe:
History of England /
Elizabethan era |
Literature:
English literature /
William Shakespeare |
Literature:
Poems about rape /
The Rape of Lucrece |
Myth:
Roman mythology /
Lucretia,
Sextus Tarquinius |
Sex and the law:
Rape /
History of rape
|