Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
Summary
Jean Fouquet's miniature of the Martyrdom of Saint Apollonia (c. 1415/20– 1481—fig. 1) represents a moment repeated, throughout late-medieval France and in other countries: an individual being tortured is on the verge of death, while a crowd, seeing the horror, looks on dispassionately, it seems. Two men bind the saint to an inclined plank with taut ropes, and another pulls her golden hair, while a fourth man yanks out her teeth with pliers that are nearly as long as her body. Apollonia's torture became slow and cruel in late-medieval hagiography and iconography, in contrast with the swift and violent tooth-breaking found in earlier versions of the story from the fourth century through the thirteenth-c. Legenda aurea, according to Leslie Abend Callahan, who cites a late fourteenth-c. Passio as well as Fouquet's illustration. She calls the later representations “an apparent shift in focus from the narration of events to the highlighting of one moment of physical pain and torment.” During the same time period, onlookers witnessed similarly painful moments within the dramatic framework of most saint plays and in public punishments.
This article explores three models for response by late-medieval spectators to the theatrical saint's body in pain: seeing the body as object, identifying with it, and entering into a dialogue with it. Each model is interpreted within a fifteenth-c. French context, always taking into account the hypothetical spectator's gender (thereby turning our three models into six). Although we will not consider the implications of a gender switch for the body in pain at the center of the spectacle, we must note that the martyrdom of male saints followed much the same pattern as that which is discussed here. Our goal is also to understand the ways in which spectator response to suffering helped to create France as a nation, as saint plays belonged to the same culture-building mechanism as judicial torture and public execution, which we will discuss in passing. Modern theoretical approaches to the body in performance may indeed lead to understanding medieval culture, provided that they are used with our careful regard for the historical context of this martyrdom.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fifteenth-Century Studies Vol. 27A Special Issue on Violence in Fifteenth-Century Text and Image, pp. 7 - 20Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002
- 1
- Cited by