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Chapter 3 - Imaginary Invalids

The Symptom and the Stage from the Restoration to the Romantics

from Part I - Literary Modes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2021

Clark Lawlor
Affiliation:
Northumbria University, Newcastle
Andrew Mangham
Affiliation:
University of Reading
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Summary

From the revival of the English theatres under the Restoration to the rise of a transnational Romantic theatre in the early nineteenth century, developments in dramatic literature and acting mirrored shifting medical constructions of the body, disease, and health. At the same time, they reflected a deep cultural anxiety about the feigning of illness. This chapter will consider how notions of both true and false ill-health were explored in English drama of the long eighteenth century through the medium of the performed symptom. Symptoms could disclose dramatic internal truths, or could be faked by both patients and actors – and misread by doctors and spectators – to comic effect. For most of the eighteenth century, the latter model prevailed as playwrights and actors drew upon theatre’s association with fakery to mock affected invalidism, incompetent physicians, and the frauds of fashionable society. As nerve-based conceptions of sensibility and vitalist paradigms rose to prominence, however, a new generation of playwrights and performers called upon disease’s symptoms not to spoof quackery but to represent emotional interiority. The resulting performance languages would help to give birth to the Romantic stage.

Type
Chapter
Information
Literature and Medicine
The Eighteenth Century
, pp. 70 - 88
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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