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Chapter 4 - Neo-Classical Tragedy

Listening to Women

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2024

Clare Finburgh Delijani
Affiliation:
Goldsmiths, University of London
Christian Biet
Affiliation:
Université Paris Nanterre
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Summary

John D. Lyons examines some of the most canonical works of the seventeenth-century Golden Age: Corneille’s Le Cid (1637) and Rodogune (1644–45), and Racine’s Britannicus (1669) and Phèdre (1677), proposing that the decisive actions of these plays often hinge on what women say, or do not say. This is far from surprising since these works are contemporaneous with two important interrelated cultural developments in the public lives of women: increasingly, they hosted Parisian salons and gaining increased importance in the political, cultural and social spheres; and in a century that witnessed attempts to standardize and refine the French language, these salons run by women became virtual workshops for formulating rules of discourse for a worldly, non-pedantic society. Tragedies from this period, perceived as the dramatic representation of the lives of kings, queens and princes, simultaneously display the sharp contrast between what can women say in public, what they conceal owing to the constraints on what they are allowed to say, and their awareness that what they say in public can have fatal consequences. These tragedies enable an appreciation of the aptness of Roland Barthes’ assertion that language, more than death, is the core of the tragic.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Recommended Reading

Goodkin, Richard E., Birth Marks: The Tragedy of Primogeniture in Pierre Corneille, Thomas Corneille, and Jean Racine (2000). A study of the central role of fraternal rivalry in tragic drama.Google Scholar
Hawcroft, Michael, Word as Action: Racine, Rhetoric, and Theatrical Language (2004). A description of the way action takes the form of speech in seventeenth-century theatre.Google Scholar
Ibbett, Katherine, The Style of the State in French Theater, 1630–1660: Neoclassicism and Government (2009). An account of the inextricable links between the political stakes of tragedy and their manifestation in rich aesthetic and theatrical inventiveness.Google Scholar
Lyons, John D., Tragedy and the Return of the Dead: Rethinking the Early Modern (2018). A contextualization of early modern tragedy within both ancient and very recent representations of death and horror.Google Scholar

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