Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise

Seeking dialogues between mothers and sons as moving and dramatically efficient as the French “Quatre Requêtes de Notre-Dame” results in finding no significant verbal exchanges in English biblical drama, moralities, interludes, and even early tragedies. Mothers are generally reduced to deplorations...

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Main Author: Marie-Hélène Besnault
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2011-09-01
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/acs/815
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author Marie-Hélène Besnault
author_facet Marie-Hélène Besnault
author_sort Marie-Hélène Besnault
collection DOAJ
description Seeking dialogues between mothers and sons as moving and dramatically efficient as the French “Quatre Requêtes de Notre-Dame” results in finding no significant verbal exchanges in English biblical drama, moralities, interludes, and even early tragedies. Mothers are generally reduced to deplorations of sons’ deaths. Shakespeare brilliantly puts an end to this scarcity of dialogues between mothers and sons with plays like Richard III, Coriolanus, and, above all, Hamlet, which this short study eludes. Instead, it focuses on the “‘bard’s” few predecessors and immediate successors, to find continuity, changes, borrowings and new trends concerning reproachful mothers and sons. Among the followers of Noah's sons dealing with their recalcitrant mother, we meet, in Nicholas Udall’s comic interlude Thersites, a son who first teases his mother, then seeks her protection, and ends with reproaches. Shakespeare's immediate successors, Middleton in The Revenger’s Tragedy and Webster in The White Devil, both dramatize relationships between mothers and sons, in several long scenes which we explore, because, unlike Shakespeare’s, they have received little attention.
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spelling doaj-art-76ea989521b94af0821541c034aad0942025-01-30T12:33:41ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662011-09-012923525010.4000/caliban.815Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaiseMarie-Hélène BesnaultSeeking dialogues between mothers and sons as moving and dramatically efficient as the French “Quatre Requêtes de Notre-Dame” results in finding no significant verbal exchanges in English biblical drama, moralities, interludes, and even early tragedies. Mothers are generally reduced to deplorations of sons’ deaths. Shakespeare brilliantly puts an end to this scarcity of dialogues between mothers and sons with plays like Richard III, Coriolanus, and, above all, Hamlet, which this short study eludes. Instead, it focuses on the “‘bard’s” few predecessors and immediate successors, to find continuity, changes, borrowings and new trends concerning reproachful mothers and sons. Among the followers of Noah's sons dealing with their recalcitrant mother, we meet, in Nicholas Udall’s comic interlude Thersites, a son who first teases his mother, then seeks her protection, and ends with reproaches. Shakespeare's immediate successors, Middleton in The Revenger’s Tragedy and Webster in The White Devil, both dramatize relationships between mothers and sons, in several long scenes which we explore, because, unlike Shakespeare’s, they have received little attention.https://journals.openedition.org/acs/815argent et vertuhommageimbrication des traditionsimitationindulgenceJean Michel
spellingShingle Marie-Hélène Besnault
Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
Anglophonia
argent et vertu
hommage
imbrication des traditions
imitation
indulgence
Jean Michel
title Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
title_full Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
title_fullStr Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
title_full_unstemmed Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
title_short Mères et fils dans le théâtre de la Renaissance anglaise
title_sort meres et fils dans le theatre de la renaissance anglaise
topic argent et vertu
hommage
imbrication des traditions
imitation
indulgence
Jean Michel
url https://journals.openedition.org/acs/815
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