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Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe

DOI link for Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe

Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe book

Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe

DOI link for Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe

Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe book

ByMathew R. Martin
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 9 March 2016
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550350
Pages 202 pages
eBook ISBN 9781315550350
SubjectsArts, Language & Literature
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Martin, M. (2015). Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550350

Contending that criticism of Marlowe’s plays has been limited by humanist conceptions of tragedy, this book engages with trauma theory, especially psychoanalytic trauma theory, to offer a fresh critical perspective within which to make sense of the tension in Marlowe’s plays between the tragic and the traumatic. The author argues that tragedies are trauma narratives, narratives of wounding; however, in Marlowe’s plays, a traumatic aesthetics disrupts the closure that tragedy seeks to enact. Martin’s fresh reading of Massacre at Paris, which is often dismissed by critics as a bad tragedy, presents the play as deliberately breaking the conventions of the tragic genre in order to enact a traumatic aesthetics that pulls its audience into one of the early modern period’s most notorious collective traumatic events, the massacre of French Huguenots in Paris in 1572. The chapters on Marlowe’s six other plays similarly argue that throughout Marlowe’s drama tragedy is held in tension with-and disrupted by-the aesthetics of trauma.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |22 pages

Introduction: Tragedy and Trauma

chapter 1|20 pages

Trauma, Faith, and Epic History in Dido, Queen of Carthage

chapter 2|18 pages

Trauma and Tragedy in Tamburlaine the Great Part One

chapter 3|24 pages

Tamburlaine the Great Part Two and the Refusal of Tragedy

chapter 4|18 pages

Tragedy and Psychopathology in The Jew of Malta

chapter 5|22 pages

Pain, History, and Theater in Edward II

chapter 6|20 pages

The Traumatic Realism of The Massacre at Paris

chapter 7|20 pages

Doctor Faustus and the Fundamental Fantasy

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