This article explores the conflation of rhetorical and physical acts of rape and massacre in a range of early modern drama, culminating in a case study of the two phenomena in Alarum for London (1599). Rooting its analysis in the Lucrece myth, the essay demonstrates how prominent traditions of reading rape — as an attack on the soul, and as an attack on a city — provide a rubric through which Alarum can be understood. When enacted concomitantly, rape and massacre have the propensity to destroy body and soul, individual, and the wider society to which they belong
In early modern England the legal definition of rape underwent an important revision and gradually, ...
Titus Andronicus in which the young Lavinia is raped and then brutally mutilated, is arguably Shakes...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...
This article explores the conflation of rhetorical and physical acts of rape and massacre in a range...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "This work explores and untangles the the...
What is rape in early modern literature, and what causes it? How do texts configure injury, will, an...
The PhD examines the web of meanings elicited by and constructed around the act and concept of massa...
The circumstances under which acts of rape are committed, and the relationship between power and sex...
This study examines how symbolism is used to suggest sexual aggression in Shakespeare’s <i>The...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
The phenomenon of passionate riot and its role in uprisings, fictional and historical, remains an an...
Titus Andronicus in which the young Lavinia is raped and then brutally mutilated, is arguably Shakes...
In early modern England the legal definition of rape underwent an important revision and gradually, ...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
There is a distinct difference in the representation of violence and its aftermath in Shakespeareâ??...
In early modern England the legal definition of rape underwent an important revision and gradually, ...
Titus Andronicus in which the young Lavinia is raped and then brutally mutilated, is arguably Shakes...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...
This article explores the conflation of rhetorical and physical acts of rape and massacre in a range...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "This work explores and untangles the the...
What is rape in early modern literature, and what causes it? How do texts configure injury, will, an...
The PhD examines the web of meanings elicited by and constructed around the act and concept of massa...
The circumstances under which acts of rape are committed, and the relationship between power and sex...
This study examines how symbolism is used to suggest sexual aggression in Shakespeare’s <i>The...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
The phenomenon of passionate riot and its role in uprisings, fictional and historical, remains an an...
Titus Andronicus in which the young Lavinia is raped and then brutally mutilated, is arguably Shakes...
In early modern England the legal definition of rape underwent an important revision and gradually, ...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
There is a distinct difference in the representation of violence and its aftermath in Shakespeareâ??...
In early modern England the legal definition of rape underwent an important revision and gradually, ...
Titus Andronicus in which the young Lavinia is raped and then brutally mutilated, is arguably Shakes...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...