她自己的幽默:莎士比亚幽默喜剧中女性气质的哲学话语对比

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 N/A MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
Aviva Farkas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:莎士比亚的幽默喜剧《驯悍记》(约1592 - 1594)和《冬天的故事》(约1609 - 1611)以厌女情节而闻名。在本文中,我通过一起阅读这两部戏剧来探索它们所属的子类型,这一练习不仅可以洞察它们独特的形式结构,还可以洞察它们所参与的文艺复兴时期的话语。在结构上,它们都是喜剧,在它们的主要情节中,描绘了一对已婚夫妇的成员,当妻子表现出与性感、男性化幽默相关的特征时,他们经历了危机。在这两部剧中,危机都是由一个扮演“医生”的角色解决的。在《驯悍记》中,医生的角色通过支持亚里士多德的自然主义幽默话语,而不是宗教或超自然的恶魔和魔鬼话语,来影响他的治疗。在《冬天的故事》中,主要的医生角色通过拥护柏拉图主义的魔法和平等的话语,而不是自然的、等级分明的幽默话语,来实现她的治愈。这两部剧都涉及到任性的配偶在经历治愈过程中的完全心理转变。就这两部幽默喜剧具有平行的结构和相反的思想价值而言,它们可以被看作是彼此的镜像。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Her Own Humor: Contrasting Philosophical Discourses of Femininity in Shakespeare's Comedies of Humors
Abstract:Shakespeare's comedies of humors, The Taming of the Shrew (ca. 1592–94) and The Winter's Tale (ca. 1609–11), are well known for plots with misogynistic elements. In this paper, I explore the subgenre to which these two plays belong by reading them together, an exercise that yields insight not only into their unique formal structure but also into the discourses of the Renaissance with which they engage. Structurally, they are both comedies that, in their primary plots, depict members of an already-married couple who experience crisis when the wife exhibits characteristics associated with hot, masculine humors. In both plays, the crisis is resolved by a character who assumes the role of a "physician." The physician character in The Taming of the Shrew effects his cure by championing the Aristotelian, naturalistic discourse of humors over the religious or preternatural discourse of demons and devils. The primary physician character in The Winter's Tale effects her cure by championing the Platonist discourses of magic and equality over the natural, hierarchical discourse of humors. Both plays involve the complete psychological transformation of the wayward spouse who undergoes the healing process. Insofar as these two comedies of humors have parallel structures and opposite ideological valences, they can be seen as mirror images of each other.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
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0.00%
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期刊介绍: Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies publishes articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies. The journal maintains a tradition of gathering work from across disciplines, with a special interest in articles that have an interdisciplinary or cross-cultural scope.
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