‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure

This essay offers a startling new reading of Shakespeare’s Angelo as a paradoxical if not tragic hero who discovers in his sudden and inexorable impulse to rape a nun in the dark that desire is always more-or-less demonic – even, and perhaps especially, when it is most elevated and for what is most...

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Main Author: Ewan Fernie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2013-01-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2608
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author Ewan Fernie
author_facet Ewan Fernie
author_sort Ewan Fernie
collection DOAJ
description This essay offers a startling new reading of Shakespeare’s Angelo as a paradoxical if not tragic hero who discovers in his sudden and inexorable impulse to rape a nun in the dark that desire is always more-or-less demonic – even, and perhaps especially, when it is most elevated and for what is most sacred and rightly lovable.  The burden of Angelo’s tragic knowledge is that we ‘sin in loving virtue’, that we are more like the carrion than the violet in the sun, that we ‘corrupt with virtuous season’.  Measure for Measure emphasises we cannot but desire as a self and in a body, to the effect that the very otherness we honour in desire we immediately want to compromise by enjoying it for our own.  The paper will argue that though it is Angelo who emblematises this, it is no less true of Isabella; and it is especially depressingly and irredeemably the case with the Duke.
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1969-6302
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publishDate 2013-01-01
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spelling doaj-art-50646854e0a04601bf1389cfcdbe1a002025-01-30T13:46:39ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022013-01-011510.4000/sillagescritiques.2608‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for MeasureEwan FernieThis essay offers a startling new reading of Shakespeare’s Angelo as a paradoxical if not tragic hero who discovers in his sudden and inexorable impulse to rape a nun in the dark that desire is always more-or-less demonic – even, and perhaps especially, when it is most elevated and for what is most sacred and rightly lovable.  The burden of Angelo’s tragic knowledge is that we ‘sin in loving virtue’, that we are more like the carrion than the violet in the sun, that we ‘corrupt with virtuous season’.  Measure for Measure emphasises we cannot but desire as a self and in a body, to the effect that the very otherness we honour in desire we immediately want to compromise by enjoying it for our own.  The paper will argue that though it is Angelo who emblematises this, it is no less true of Isabella; and it is especially depressingly and irredeemably the case with the Duke.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2608Robert Louis StevensonShakespearedesiresublimationthe demonicpossession
spellingShingle Ewan Fernie
‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
Sillages Critiques
Robert Louis Stevenson
Shakespeare
desire
sublimation
the demonic
possession
title ‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
title_full ‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
title_fullStr ‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
title_full_unstemmed ‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
title_short ‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
title_sort to sin in loving virtue desire and possession in measure for measure
topic Robert Louis Stevenson
Shakespeare
desire
sublimation
the demonic
possession
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2608
work_keys_str_mv AT ewanfernie tosininlovingvirtuedesireandpossessioninmeasureformeasure