This essay addresses the ways in which Shakespeare makes his Lucrece capable of changing her status from that of a Petrarchan, dead-like “virtuous monument”, offered to the inspection of Tarquin’s predatory gaze, to that of a pre-mortem ‘monument’ of herself as an image that actively troubles and displaces the male gaze of her kinsmen. The point of departure is Lucrece’s long-drawn ekphrasis of the Troy piece, which takes place after her rape: a vicarious exploration of the self through which, Del Sapio argues, she transforms her own face, by way of a fashioning ars moriendi, into a disquieting ‘anatomy of ruin’ – an écorché, a living and revengeful tabula anatomica. What this essay suggests is that Lucrece’s post-rape, self-possessing as...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...
This thesis examines four of William Shakespeare’s plays that ‘property’ bodies and dehumanize chara...
Renaissance drama, viewed against the new, fame-obsessed restlessness of Petrarch, Cardan, and Monta...
This essay offers a critical, historical, and authorial analysis of the intersection of gender and s...
With an emphasis on the religious figuration of its heroine’s chaste body, the present ess...
This essay focuses on the female complaint in vogue in England in the second half of the sixteenth c...
Issues of scale and category are becoming increasingly urgent within early modern studies, particula...
The myth in charge of issuing the story of the rape of Lucretia has played an important role in hist...
There is at present a tendency in some criticism to argue that Lucrece is one of many women in sixte...
This essay examines the conflation of blood stains, blots and blemishes, and graphic allusions in Wi...
In The Rape of Lucrece, Shakespeare anatomizes Lucrece\u27s body-fragments the whole, splits apart t...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
This essay demonstrates the interrelationship between the historical source (Livy, Ab Urbe Condita L...
The essay deals with the two poems by Shakespeare and Middleton dealing with the character of Lucrec...
This project explores Shakespeare’s treatment of rape and sexual violence in Titus Andronicus and Th...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...
This thesis examines four of William Shakespeare’s plays that ‘property’ bodies and dehumanize chara...
Renaissance drama, viewed against the new, fame-obsessed restlessness of Petrarch, Cardan, and Monta...
This essay offers a critical, historical, and authorial analysis of the intersection of gender and s...
With an emphasis on the religious figuration of its heroine’s chaste body, the present ess...
This essay focuses on the female complaint in vogue in England in the second half of the sixteenth c...
Issues of scale and category are becoming increasingly urgent within early modern studies, particula...
The myth in charge of issuing the story of the rape of Lucretia has played an important role in hist...
There is at present a tendency in some criticism to argue that Lucrece is one of many women in sixte...
This essay examines the conflation of blood stains, blots and blemishes, and graphic allusions in Wi...
In The Rape of Lucrece, Shakespeare anatomizes Lucrece\u27s body-fragments the whole, splits apart t...
(Re)Calling Philomela: Cultural Perceptions, Community Incorporation, and Collective Memory in Shake...
This essay demonstrates the interrelationship between the historical source (Livy, Ab Urbe Condita L...
The essay deals with the two poems by Shakespeare and Middleton dealing with the character of Lucrec...
This project explores Shakespeare’s treatment of rape and sexual violence in Titus Andronicus and Th...
The essay surveys representations of rape in selected Shakespeare’s works. The subject fascinated Sh...
This thesis examines four of William Shakespeare’s plays that ‘property’ bodies and dehumanize chara...
Renaissance drama, viewed against the new, fame-obsessed restlessness of Petrarch, Cardan, and Monta...