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Unknown
First published: March 1, 2026 - Last updated: March 1, 2026
TITLE INFORMATION
Author: Megan Snell
Title: Titular Violence in Beaumont and Fletcher’s The Maid’s Tragedy
Subtitle: -
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: 97-113
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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ISBN-13: 9781003659990 (ebk.) -
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WorldCat
Language: English
Keywords:
Modern History:
17th Century |
European History:
English History |
Representations:
Literary Texts /
Francis Beaumont,
John Fletcher
FULL TEXT
Links:
- Google Books (Limited Preview)
- Taylor & Francis Online (Restricted Access)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Author:
Megan Snell,
College of General Studies,
Boston University -
Google Scholar
Abstracts:
»In “Titular Violence in Beaumont and Fletcher’s The Maid’s Tragedy,” Megan Snell explores The Maid’s Tragedy, which directly stages a deeply sexualized, violent act by a woman against her erstwhile lover. Snell argues that the relentless conflation of sex and violence is inextricable from the play’s relationship to its notoriously perplexing title, both within the play and in its reception history and later adaptations.«
(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)
-
»Before she appears on stage, the jilted Aspatia of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher’s The Maid’s Tragedy (1611) receives an introduction from Lysippus, the King’s brother, that befits the play’s title: this Lady Walks discontented, with her wat’ry eyes Bent on the earth. The unfrequented woods Are her delight; and, when she sees a bank Stuck full of flowers, she with a sigh will tell Her servants what a pretty place it were To bury lovers in, and make her maids Pluck ’em, and strow her over like a corse. She carries with her an infectious grief That strikes all her beholders. (1.1.89–98) 1 How exactly Lysippus knows this information about the lady and her maidens in the “unfrequented woods” is not specified, but also not entirely necessary. Evoking other portrayals of discontented ladies in flowery nature, such as Gertrude’s strangely knowledgeable account of the drowned Ophelia, Lysippus prepares us to meet an archetypal tragic maid. His description ends with an explication of her “infectious grief,” claiming that when her “wanton” (1.1.101) young ladies Tell mirthful tales in course that fill the room With laughter, she will with so sad a look Bring forth a story of the silent death Of some forsaken virgin, which her grief Will put in such a phrase, that ere she end, She’ll send them weeping one by one away. (1.1.102–7) Yet after hearing Lysippus’s tale of Aspatia’s contagious woe that sends others away in tears, the audience watches the opposite happen in The Maid’s Tragedy.«
(Source: Taylor & Francis Online)
Contents:
| |
“The Maid’s Tragedy” as a Cultural Discourse of Sex and Violence (p. 100) |
| |
“The Maid’s Tragedy” as Murder Method (p. 103) |
| |
“The Maid’s Tragedy” as Re-Reversal of Narrative Authority (p. 106) |
| |
Notes (p. 109) |
| |
Works Cited (p. 112) |
Reviews: -
Wikipedia:
History of Europe:
History of England /
Stuart period |
Literature:
English literature /
Francis Beaumont,
John Fletcher (playwright),
The Maid's Tragedy |
Sex and the law:
Sexual violence
|