Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements and Dedication
- Introduction: Female Fury and the Masculine Spirit of Vengeance
- Part I The Gendering of Revenge
- Part II Friends and Family – ‘Revenging Home’
- Part III Women’s Weapons
- Part IV Women Transmogrified
- Part V Lamentation, Gender Roles and Vengeance
- List of Contributors
- Index
9 - ‘Women’s Weapons’: Education and Female Revenge on the Early Modern Stage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements and Dedication
- Introduction: Female Fury and the Masculine Spirit of Vengeance
- Part I The Gendering of Revenge
- Part II Friends and Family – ‘Revenging Home’
- Part III Women’s Weapons
- Part IV Women Transmogrified
- Part V Lamentation, Gender Roles and Vengeance
- List of Contributors
- Index
Summary
‘My tables! Meet it is I set it down’, exclaims the most famous revenger of the early modern theatre, as he employs the study methods he has acquired at university to record a ghost's lesson of murder and retribution. While initially promising that ‘thy commandment all alone shall live / Within the book and volume of my brain’ (1.5.102–3), Hamlet will later rely on his prior learning to test the truth of his uncle's guilt, composing ‘a speech of some dozen lines’ that, inserted into The Murder of Gonzago, enables him to try the king and ‘tent him to the quick’ (2.2.477, 532). This association between words and violent action, the humanist education system and the pursuit of revenge, became even more emphatic in Jacobean drama, when the figure of the malcontent – often depicted as a socially ambitious scholar whose prospects for advancement have been blocked by entrenched aristocratic privilege – gained in popularity. From De Flores in The Changeling and Bosola in The Duchess of Malfi, to Vindice in The Revenger's Tragedy and the eponymous protagonist of Antonio's Revenge, Jacobean revengers invite audiences to reflect on the relationship between humanist learning, with its emphasis on proper governance and moral education, and the violent retribution that they enact upon corrupt rulers and unjust societies. Hinting at early modern doubts about whether humanism would be able to live up to its ideals in practice, such characters are credited with the ability to ‘manipulate a fluid and contingent world with a dramatist's inventiveness and authority’; as John Kerrigan has shown, the early modern revenger becomes a ‘surrogate artist’, ‘transmuting creative ambition into narrative and stage action’. The educational heritage that these fictional characters share with their creators is especially significant. Early modern playwrights and their metatheatrical protagonists both drew inspiration from classical models: the Roman author Seneca's influence on Elizabethan and Jacobean revenge drama has long been recognised by critics, while Tanya Pollard's chapter in this collection demonstrates how early modern authors responded to and reworked the legacy of ancient Greek tragedy. Yet the significance of the associations between humanist education and revenge action for the female avengers of sixteenthand seventeenth-century drama have not yet been fully addressed.
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- Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2018