Autore: Manninen, Alisa
Titolo: Speech and Spectacle as Political Participation for Shakespeare's Roman Women
Periodico: Textus
Anno: 2016 - Fascicolo: 2 - Pagina iniziale: 63 - Pagina finale: 82

The public spectacle is central to ancient Rome in the Western imagination. Through spoken rhetoric and acted performances, spectacle offers a means for political participation that can be accessible even to women. Shakespeare explores these opportunities in his Roman plays. In "Julius Caesar", the unease over corruption extends to Portia's failure to transform her claim to Roman virtue into a meaningful role in the republic. "Coriolanus" gives its concluding triumph to Volumnia: she is the play's most emphatic, successful performer of Romanness. Though Cleopatra claims control over noble suicide in "Antony and Cleopatra", the sense of diminishment that is created by Caesar's victory is echoed in Octavia's irrelevance to the performances of the Roman Empire: stripped of the roles that women and citizens could play, spectacle will serve the emperor alone.


Premi sulle icone a fianco dei nomi per visualizzare i libri scritti dall'autore



SICI: 1824-3967(2016)2<63:SASAPP>2.0.ZU;2-A
Testo completo: https://www.rivisteweb.it/download/article/10.7370/86642
Testo completo alternativo: https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.7370/86642

Esportazione dati in Refworks (solo per utenti abilitati)

Record salvabile in Zotero

Biblioteche ACNP che possiedono il periodico
Le Biblioteche aderenti
foto biblioteca

Università degli studi [Milano] : Facoltà di scienze politiche : Biblioteca
Via Conservatorio, 7
20122 - Milano