There is at present a tendency in some criticism to argue that Lucrece is one of many women in sixteenth- and seventeenth century literature who, as Deborah G. Burks puts it in a recent essay, "have internalized th[e] sense of their own culpability for men's assaults on them." In this paper, Daalder states that Burks' reading is wrong. If the lines Burks focuses on are, instead, read as belonging to the stanza as a whole, they form part of a statement in which Lucrece unequivocally and clearheadedly accuses her attacker
The way in which femininity is represented in literature often reinforces the idea of the objectifie...
Growing out of recent scholarship on humoral theory and emotions in early modern literary texts, thi...
With an emphasis on the religious figuration of its heroine’s chaste body, the present ess...
This essay offers a critical, historical, and authorial analysis of the intersection of gender and s...
This project explores Shakespeare’s treatment of rape and sexual violence in Titus Andronicus and Th...
This essay addresses the ways in which Shakespeare makes his Lucrece capable of changing her status ...
The myth in charge of issuing the story of the rape of Lucretia has played an important role in hist...
This essay focuses on the female complaint in vogue in England in the second half of the sixteenth c...
This essay demonstrates the interrelationship between the historical source (Livy, Ab Urbe Condita L...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
Othello´s acclaimed bravery and courage cannot save him from his demise. This essay considers aspect...
This essay examines the conflation of blood stains, blots and blemishes, and graphic allusions in Wi...
Issues of scale and category are becoming increasingly urgent within early modern studies, particula...
The circumstances under which acts of rape are committed, and the relationship between power and sex...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
The way in which femininity is represented in literature often reinforces the idea of the objectifie...
Growing out of recent scholarship on humoral theory and emotions in early modern literary texts, thi...
With an emphasis on the religious figuration of its heroine’s chaste body, the present ess...
This essay offers a critical, historical, and authorial analysis of the intersection of gender and s...
This project explores Shakespeare’s treatment of rape and sexual violence in Titus Andronicus and Th...
This essay addresses the ways in which Shakespeare makes his Lucrece capable of changing her status ...
The myth in charge of issuing the story of the rape of Lucretia has played an important role in hist...
This essay focuses on the female complaint in vogue in England in the second half of the sixteenth c...
This essay demonstrates the interrelationship between the historical source (Livy, Ab Urbe Condita L...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
Othello´s acclaimed bravery and courage cannot save him from his demise. This essay considers aspect...
This essay examines the conflation of blood stains, blots and blemishes, and graphic allusions in Wi...
Issues of scale and category are becoming increasingly urgent within early modern studies, particula...
The circumstances under which acts of rape are committed, and the relationship between power and sex...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
The way in which femininity is represented in literature often reinforces the idea of the objectifie...
Growing out of recent scholarship on humoral theory and emotions in early modern literary texts, thi...
With an emphasis on the religious figuration of its heroine’s chaste body, the present ess...