欲望,扭曲的渴望,和恩底弥翁的植物

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Renaissance Drama Pub Date : 2016-03-01 DOI:10.1086/685941
S. Kelley
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在文艺复兴时期的英国,两种将欲望定位于残疾人身体的印刷形式开始出现在舞台上,产生了截然不同的后果。第一首是反亵渎诗,是赞美畸形爱人的讽刺诗。由Francesco Berni (1497-1535), Pietro Aretino(1492-1556)和clemacment Marot(1496-1544)作为一种反彼得拉克主义的形式而发展起来的,这种反彼得拉克主义是通过一种被称为悖论赞美的课堂练习而普及的,这种修辞会提升诸如瘟疫,贫穷或丑陋等看似不受欢迎的状态。在剧院里,托法斯爵士在约翰·莱利的《恩底弥翁》(1588)中称赞他的情妇迪普萨斯珊瑚色的眼睛、银色的嘴唇、蓝色的牙齿和红宝石般的鼻子;霍雷肖寻找身体上的畸形(“诚实隐藏的嘴唇……摩尔人肤色的牙齿……女巫的胡子”),在詹姆斯·雪莉的《公爵的情妇》(1638)中,他的理想女人菲亚梅塔;锡拉丘兹的德罗米奥在莎士比亚的《错误喜剧》(1589-93)中对他的“聪明”厨房女佣内尔进行了全面剖析。对于文学评论家来说,抒情的讽刺诗被认为是充满敌意的、嘲弄的、厌恶女性的——把男性诗人声称崇拜的女性病态化——比象征着肢解所爱的人的火焰更有问题。在抒情传统中,女性被男性说话者客观化,完全被包含在语言之中。但在剧场里,演员可以用许多不同的方式破坏这些规则,特别是考虑到观众看到心爱的人(一个真实的人),他们对他或她的口头形象的反应可能会产生同情、关注或亲密关系。而不是列出部件
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Desire, a Crooked Yearning, and the Plants of Endymion
two print forms that located desire in the disabled body began to appear onstage with far different consequences in Renaissance England. The first of these was the contreblason, satiric verse in praise of a deformed beloved. Developed by Francesco Berni (1497–1535), Pietro Aretino (1492–1556), and Clément Marot (1496–1544) as a form of anti-Petrarchanism, the contreblason was popularized through a schoolroom exercise known as paradoxical praise, rhetoric that elevated seemingly undesirable states such as the plague, poverty, or ugliness. In the theater, Sir Tophas praises his mistress Dipsas for her coral eyes, silver lips, blue teeth, and carbuncle nose in John Lyly’s Endymion (1588); Horatio seeks physical deformities (“lips of honest hide . . . teeth of a Moor’s complexion . . . a witch’s beard”) in Fiametta, his ideal woman, in James Shirley’s The Duke’s Mistress (1638); and Dromio of Syracuse performs a global anatomy of Nell, his “swart” kitchen wench in Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors (1589–93). For literary critics, lyric mock encomia are seen as hostile, mocking, and misogynistic—pathologizing the women the male poets claim to admire—and twice as problematic as the blazon, which figuratively dismembers the beloved. In the lyric tradition, women are objectified by the male speaker and wholly contained within language. But in the playhouse, actors could undermine these rules in many different ways, especially given that an audience sees the beloved (a real person), whose reaction to his or her verbal portrait may generate sympathy, attention, or intimacy. Rather than list parts
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来源期刊
Renaissance Drama
Renaissance Drama Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.30
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发文量
8
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