Front cover image for Fatal desire : women, sexuality, and the English stage, 1660-1720

Fatal desire : women, sexuality, and the English stage, 1660-1720

"Informed by film theory and a broad historical approach, Fatal Desire examines the theatrical representation of women in England, from the Restoration to the early eighteenth century - a period when for the first time female actors could perform in public. Jean I. Marsden maintains that the feminization of serious drama during this period is tied to the cultural function of theater. Women served as symbols of both domestic and imperial propriety, and so Marsden links the representation of women on the stage to the social context in which the plays appeared and to the moral and often political lessons they offered the audience. The witty heroines of comedies were usually absorbed into the social fabric by marrying similarly lighthearted gentlemen, but the heroines of tragedy suffered for their sins, real or perceived. That suffering served the dual purpose of titillating and educating the theater audience." "Marsden discusses such plays as William Wycherley's Plain Dealer (1676), John Vanbrugh's Provoked Wife (1697), Thomas Otway's Orphan (1680), Thomas Southerne's Fatal Marriage (1694), and William Congreve's Mourning Bride (1697). The author also addresses tragedies written by three female playwrights, Mary Pix, Catharine Trotter, and Delarivier Manley, and sketches developments in tragedy during the period."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2006
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y., 2006
Criticism, interpretation, etc
viii, 216 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780801444470, 0801444470
61694800
Female spectatorship, Jeremy Collier, and the antitheatrical debate
Women watching : the female spectator in late-seventeenth-century comedy
Falling women : she-tragedy and sexual spectacle
Women writing women : female authors of she-tragedy
Nicholas Rowe and the second generation of she-tragedy
Sex, politics, and the Hanoverian succession : refiguring Lady Jane Grey