"Secret, Black, and Midnight Hags": The Conception, Presentation and Functions of Witches in English Renaissance DramaThe present dissertation analyses the conception, depiction and functions of witch figures in English Elizabethan and Jacobean drama including their relevant predecessors and successors until the closing of the theatres in 1642. The focus is on malevolent female figures who are linked to black magic and partly prove their supernatural powers on the stage. The applied methodology of analysis has been developed from Manfred Pfister's set of criteria in Das Drama. In the first part of the investigation, the field of witchcraft is essentially described in its cultural and historical context. After a close examination of the witch figures in the main part it becomes evident that figures based on real-life models are generally conceived as more individual, complex and dynamic than those who are partly derived from classical and literary sources. Figures in drama without any connection with real-life trials generally represent the archetypal and universally valid idea of evil that could have never been communicated with the same intensity by old, lonely and isolated women in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. In conclusion it should be noted that witch figures in less-known plays deserve more critical attention than they received in the past, and the majority of figures in well-known plays merit reconsideration and reveal new approaches to their interpretation. |
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The two categories are further subdivided , and in intratextual relations , a figure
may assume the principal function of the protagonist or antagonist or perform a
supportive or oppositional function in relation to either the protagonist , the ...
The two categories are further subdivided , and in intratextual relations , a figure
may assume the principal function of the protagonist or antagonist or perform a
supportive or oppositional function in relation to either the protagonist , the ...
Página 150
Further positive associations are achieved by several comparisons of Joan with
figures of religion and Christian mythology . 199 After Joan has developed a
powerful image of the transitoriness of glory , 200 Charles exclaims : “ Was
Mahomet ...
Further positive associations are achieved by several comparisons of Joan with
figures of religion and Christian mythology . 199 After Joan has developed a
powerful image of the transitoriness of glory , 200 Charles exclaims : “ Was
Mahomet ...
Página 340
This is also a valid explanation , since further witches seem to be mentioned later
in the play . See note below . 114 Lancashire 2 . 1 . 11 SD . It is worth noting that
only two of the familiars , Mamilion and Puckling , are named in this scene .
This is also a valid explanation , since further witches seem to be mentioned later
in the play . See note below . 114 Lancashire 2 . 1 . 11 SD . It is worth noting that
only two of the familiars , Mamilion and Puckling , are named in this scene .
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Índice
Introduction | 1 |
Witchcraft in the European Context | 13 |
Malevolent Witches in English Renaissance Drama | 55 |
Direitos de autor | |
Palavras e frases frequentes
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