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Revenge tragedy

Revenge tragedy (sometimes referred to as revenge drama, revenge play, or tragedy of blood) is a theatrical genre, in which the principal theme is revenge and revenge's fatal consequences.[1] Formally established by American educator Ashley H. Thorndike in his 1902 article "The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary Revenge Plays," a revenge tragedy documents the progress of the protagonist's revenge plot and often leads to the demise of both the murderers and the avenger himself.[1]

The genre first appeared in early modern Britain with the publication of Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy during the latter half of the 16th century. Earlier works, such as Jasper Heywood's translations of Seneca (1560s) and Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville's play Gorbuduc (1561), are also considered revenge tragedies. Other well-known revenge tragedies include William Shakespeare's Hamlet (c.1599-1602) and Titus Andronicus (c.1588-1593), and The Revenger's Tragedy (c.1606) formerly believed to be by Cyril Tourneur, now ascribed to Thomas Middleton.

Key elements of revenge tragedy edit

As established through the precedent of early English playwrights like Thomas Kyd, a good revenge play must include the following:

  • A shocking murder has been committed, crying out for revenge.
  • Person, or persons, take up the vengeful mission as a sacred duty.
  • Ghost of murdered person provides further stimulus for retribution; alternatively there are omens and presentiments.
  • Machiavellian villain who, acting on his own behalf or for other causes facilitates a pandemic of blood shed whilst introducing new fangled tortures and horrors.
  • Objects of revenge are often better than the avengers.
  • Some characters grow mad or feign madness.
  • Play within a play that often mimics the core of the main action.
  • Use of imagery and language befitting the violence of the events.

Revenge tragedy as a genre edit

The genre of revenge tragedy developed as a means of explaining early modern tragedies that maintain a theme or motif of revenge in varying degrees. Classification of the revenge tragedy is at times contentious, as with other early modern theatrical genres.

 
Shakespeare's First Folio

Lawrence Danson suggested that Shakespeare and his contemporaries had a "healthy ability to live comfortably with the unruliness of a theatre where the genre was not static but moving and mixing, always producing new possibilities."[2] On the contrary, Shakespeare's 1623 First Folio famously depicts the printer-imposed (William Jaggard and Edward Blount) three genres of comedy, history, and tragedy, leading readers to falsely believe that plays are easily categorized and contained.[3] While these three genres have remained staples in discussions of genre, other genres are often either invoked or created to accommodate the generic slipperiness of early modern drama. These include not only revenge tragedy, but also city comedy, romance, pastoral, and problem play, among others.[4]

It is common to consider any tragedy containing an element of revenge a revenge tragedy. Lily Campbell argues that revenge is the great thematic uniter of all early modern tragedy, and "Elizabethan tragedy must appear as fundamentally a tragedy of revenge if the extent of the idea of revenge be but grasped".[5] Fredson Bowers's work (1959) on the genre not only widened and complicated what revenge tragedy is, but also increased its function as a productive lens in the work of dramatic interpretation. For example, Titus Andronicus was originally marketed in the First Folio as The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus. Hamlet was similarly titled in the First Folio as The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark and The Tragical History of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark in the Second Quarto edition (1604). It's not unusual to find present-day editors classifying these plays as tragedies;[6][7] however, it is becoming increasingly common to also read and interpret early modern drama with other genres in mind, such as revenge tragedy.

Lucius Seneca edit

Lucius Seneca was a prominent playwright of the first century, famous for helping shape the genre of revenge tragedy with his ten plays: Hercules Furens, Troades, Phoenissae, Medea, Phaedra, Oedipus, Agamemnon, Thyestes, Hercules Oetaeus, and Octavia.[8] The importance of his plays lies in the difficulty of the period. While the Elizabethan tragedy was considered more acceptable, revenge tragedy sought to unleash the carnal side of human nature on stage in a much more grotesque way. It was a transitional time in the literary world that would eventually lead to grueling pieces like these. Infamous scenes like the cannibalistic feast in Thyestes introduce the audience to another dimension of the human experience, challenging them to reflect on extreme emotions and dig deeper into the conventions of the genre.

Seneca’s Thyestes, a tale of revenge and horror with prominent cannibalism, can be identified as one of the first "revenge pieces". In the power struggle between two brothers, Atreus and Thyestes, there is a clear theme of revenge. The underlying plot is Thyestes's affair with Atreus' wife. He stole his treasured golden fleece, and sneakily took the throne of Mycenae from him. After a long period of exile, Thyestes is allowed to return to Mycenae. However, the conflict escalates when Atreus executes his revenge by tricking Thyestes into eating his children. Although overtly grotesque, this piece of literature follows the conventions of the revenge tragedy genre. In Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton's Gorbudoc (1562) can be found what is considered by many to be an exact representation of Senecan revenge drama in all aspects.

Thomas Kyd edit

Thomas Kyd provided a refined form of Senecan tragedy through his play The Spanish Tragedy (1592).

William Shakespeare edit

William Shakespeare was an English poet and playwright from the 16th century.[9] Shakespeare's plays Hamlet, Othello and even King Lear may be referred to as revenge tragedies but it is Titus Andronicus that truly embraces this genre. It is a play that contains: fourteen killings (nine on stage), six severed members, one rape, one live burial, one case of insanity, one incidence of cannibalism. In short 5.2 atrocities per act or one for every ninety seven lines. "It is a great play, we're talking 14 dead bodies, kung-fu sword-fu, arrow-fu, dagger-fu, pie-fu, animal screams on the soundtrack, heads roll, hands roll, tongues roll, nine and half quarts of blood and a record breaking ninety four on the vomit scale."[10]

After ten long years of hard-fought war the Roman General, Titus Andronicus, returns triumphant but with only four out of his twenty five sons alive. One of the captures he has made is Tamora, Queen of the enemy Goths, and her four sons. In accordance with Roman ritual Titus makes a sacrifice of Tamora's eldest son to honour his dead sons. Tamora wants revenge and sets out to get it.

She begins her vendetta by seducing and then marrying the Emperor whilst scheming with her lover to have two of Titus' sons framed for the murder of the Emperor's brother. The plan is successful and the two sons are beheaded. Titus' remaining son is banished when he tries to intercede on behalf of his sister to allow her to marry the person she loves and not her betrothed. Tamora convinces her two sons to avenge their brother's death by raping Titus' daughter Lavinia. After the rape they cut off her hands and tongue in order that she cannot tell anyone what has happened. With each tragedy Titus sinks lower and lower and begins to act strangely and is assumed to be crazy from grief. Having feigned madness Titus tricks Tamora inviting her and the Emperor for dinner. Unbeknownst to them Titus has captured and killed Tamora's two sons and has made them into a pie. This he feeds to the two before killing both Tamora and Lavinia. A veritable massacre ensues leaving only a handful of characters live. Having returned from banishment and assuming the mantle of Emperor, Titus' son has the solo living progeny of Tamora buried alive and Tamora's corpse thrown to the wolves.

Other examples edit

Elizabethan and Jacobean writers employed as many of these features as their plots allowed and freely made variations in them. Revenge tragedy caught their imagination and writers attempted plays of this genre with their own variations of dramaturgy. Shakespeare raised his revenge tragedy to a high intellectual and philosophical level by making Hamlet a virtuous, sensitive scholar. Cyril Tourneur exploited the morbid and melodramatic in The Atheists Tragedy (1611). John Webster reversed the moral position of avengers and victims. In The White Devil and The Duchess of Malfi the victims of the so called revenge are heroic women and the avengers blood thirsty villains. In The Duchess of Malfi (1623) the main characters plot to kill their widowed sister who secretly marries without their consent.

Christopher Crosbie's book explores the connection between early modern revenge tragedies and underlying philosophical influences, aiming to unveil how these plays addressed ontological questions rooted in classical philosophy. He delves into specific works, such as Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, Hamlet, John Marston's Antonio's Revenge, and John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi, highlighting the philosophical elements woven into the fabric of these dramas. Crosbie's in-depth analysis reveals how concepts from Aristotle, Galen, Lucretius, and Stoicism are interwoven into the plays, shedding new light on the philosophical underpinnings of early modern revenge tragedies.[11]

Other examples of revenge tragedies include The Jew of Malta (1589, Christopher Marlowe), Antonio’s Revenge (1600, John Marston), and The Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois (1613, George Chapman).

In his essay "Of Revenge", Francis Bacon wrote "This is certain, that a man studieth revenge, keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well."[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Thorndike, A. H. "The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary Revenge Plays." Modern Language Association. 17.2 (1902): 125-220. Print.
  2. ^ Danson, Lawrence. Shakespeare's Dramatic Genres. Oxford University Press, Oxford: 2000. Print. p. 11.
  3. ^ The First Folio, printed after his death, was also prepared by Shakespeare's colleagues John Heminges and Henry Condell.
  4. ^ "REVENGE TRAGEDY- SOCIETY'S MIRROR OR THE PORNOGRAPHY OF VIOLENCE?". THE CAMBRIDGE CRITIQUE. 2020-04-06. Retrieved 2023-11-10.
  5. ^ Campbell, Lily. "Theories of Revenge in Renaissance England." Modern Philology. 28.3 (1931) 281-296. Print.
  6. ^ Engle, Lars. Introduction to The Duchess of Malfi. The Duchess of Malfi. By John Webster. English Renaissance Drama. Eds. David Bevington, et al. Norton, New York: 2002. 1749-1754. Print. p. 1749.
  7. ^ Weis, Rene. Introduction. John Webster: The Duchess of Malfi and Other Plays. By John Webster. Oxford University Press, Oxford: 1996. ix-xxviii. Print. p. xxiii
  8. ^ Alkhaleefah, Tarek A. "The Senecan Tragedy and its Adaptation for the Elizabethan Stage: A Study of Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy." International Journal of English and Literature 6.9 (Sept. 2015): 163-167. Print.
  9. ^ Alchin, Linda K. "William Shakespeare". William Shakespeare. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  10. ^ Cohen, Derek (1993). Shakespeare's Culture of Violence. London: St Martins.
  11. ^ Knapp, James A. (2020-05-01). "Revenge Tragedy and Classical Philosophy on the Early Modern Stage . Christopher Crosbie. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2019. Pp. vii+310". Modern Philology. 117 (4): E237–E239. doi:10.1086/708344. ISSN 0026-8232.
  12. ^ Bacon, Francis (2010). The New Atlantis and The City of the Sun. Kessinger Publishing.

revenge, tragedy, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Revenge tragedy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Revenge tragedy sometimes referred to as revenge drama revenge play or tragedy of blood is a theatrical genre in which the principal theme is revenge and revenge s fatal consequences 1 Formally established by American educator Ashley H Thorndike in his 1902 article The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary Revenge Plays a revenge tragedy documents the progress of the protagonist s revenge plot and often leads to the demise of both the murderers and the avenger himself 1 The genre first appeared in early modern Britain with the publication of Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy during the latter half of the 16th century Earlier works such as Jasper Heywood s translations of Seneca 1560s and Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville s play Gorbuduc 1561 are also considered revenge tragedies Other well known revenge tragedies include William Shakespeare s Hamlet c 1599 1602 and Titus Andronicus c 1588 1593 and The Revenger s Tragedy c 1606 formerly believed to be by Cyril Tourneur now ascribed to Thomas Middleton Contents 1 Key elements of revenge tragedy 2 Revenge tragedy as a genre 2 1 Lucius Seneca 2 2 Thomas Kyd 2 3 William Shakespeare 2 4 Other examples 3 ReferencesKey elements of revenge tragedy editAs established through the precedent of early English playwrights like Thomas Kyd a good revenge play must include the following A shocking murder has been committed crying out for revenge Person or persons take up the vengeful mission as a sacred duty Ghost of murdered person provides further stimulus for retribution alternatively there are omens and presentiments Machiavellian villain who acting on his own behalf or for other causes facilitates a pandemic of blood shed whilst introducing new fangled tortures and horrors Objects of revenge are often better than the avengers Some characters grow mad or feign madness Play within a play that often mimics the core of the main action Use of imagery and language befitting the violence of the events Revenge tragedy as a genre editThe genre of revenge tragedy developed as a means of explaining early modern tragedies that maintain a theme or motif of revenge in varying degrees Classification of the revenge tragedy is at times contentious as with other early modern theatrical genres nbsp Shakespeare s First FolioLawrence Danson suggested that Shakespeare and his contemporaries had a healthy ability to live comfortably with the unruliness of a theatre where the genre was not static but moving and mixing always producing new possibilities 2 On the contrary Shakespeare s 1623 First Folio famously depicts the printer imposed William Jaggard and Edward Blount three genres of comedy history and tragedy leading readers to falsely believe that plays are easily categorized and contained 3 While these three genres have remained staples in discussions of genre other genres are often either invoked or created to accommodate the generic slipperiness of early modern drama These include not only revenge tragedy but also city comedy romance pastoral and problem play among others 4 It is common to consider any tragedy containing an element of revenge a revenge tragedy Lily Campbell argues that revenge is the great thematic uniter of all early modern tragedy and Elizabethan tragedy must appear as fundamentally a tragedy of revenge if the extent of the idea of revenge be but grasped 5 Fredson Bowers s work 1959 on the genre not only widened and complicated what revenge tragedy is but also increased its function as a productive lens in the work of dramatic interpretation For example Titus Andronicus was originally marketed in the First Folio as The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus Hamlet was similarly titled in the First Folio as The Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark and The Tragical History of Hamlet Prince of Denmark in the Second Quarto edition 1604 It s not unusual to find present day editors classifying these plays as tragedies 6 7 however it is becoming increasingly common to also read and interpret early modern drama with other genres in mind such as revenge tragedy Lucius Seneca edit Lucius Seneca was a prominent playwright of the first century famous for helping shape the genre of revenge tragedy with his ten plays Hercules Furens Troades Phoenissae Medea Phaedra Oedipus Agamemnon Thyestes Hercules Oetaeus and Octavia 8 The importance of his plays lies in the difficulty of the period While the Elizabethan tragedy was considered more acceptable revenge tragedy sought to unleash the carnal side of human nature on stage in a much more grotesque way It was a transitional time in the literary world that would eventually lead to grueling pieces like these Infamous scenes like the cannibalistic feast in Thyestes introduce the audience to another dimension of the human experience challenging them to reflect on extreme emotions and dig deeper into the conventions of the genre Seneca s Thyestes a tale of revenge and horror with prominent cannibalism can be identified as one of the first revenge pieces In the power struggle between two brothers Atreus and Thyestes there is a clear theme of revenge The underlying plot is Thyestes s affair with Atreus wife He stole his treasured golden fleece and sneakily took the throne of Mycenae from him After a long period of exile Thyestes is allowed to return to Mycenae However the conflict escalates when Atreus executes his revenge by tricking Thyestes into eating his children Although overtly grotesque this piece of literature follows the conventions of the revenge tragedy genre In Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton s Gorbudoc 1562 can be found what is considered by many to be an exact representation of Senecan revenge drama in all aspects Thomas Kyd edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Thomas Kyd provided a refined form of Senecan tragedy through his play The Spanish Tragedy 1592 William Shakespeare edit William Shakespeare was an English poet and playwright from the 16th century 9 Shakespeare s plays Hamlet Othello and even King Lear may be referred to as revenge tragedies but it is Titus Andronicus that truly embraces this genre It is a play that contains fourteen killings nine on stage six severed members one rape one live burial one case of insanity one incidence of cannibalism In short 5 2 atrocities per act or one for every ninety seven lines It is a great play we re talking 14 dead bodies kung fu sword fu arrow fu dagger fu pie fu animal screams on the soundtrack heads roll hands roll tongues roll nine and half quarts of blood and a record breaking ninety four on the vomit scale 10 After ten long years of hard fought war the Roman General Titus Andronicus returns triumphant but with only four out of his twenty five sons alive One of the captures he has made is Tamora Queen of the enemy Goths and her four sons In accordance with Roman ritual Titus makes a sacrifice of Tamora s eldest son to honour his dead sons Tamora wants revenge and sets out to get it She begins her vendetta by seducing and then marrying the Emperor whilst scheming with her lover to have two of Titus sons framed for the murder of the Emperor s brother The plan is successful and the two sons are beheaded Titus remaining son is banished when he tries to intercede on behalf of his sister to allow her to marry the person she loves and not her betrothed Tamora convinces her two sons to avenge their brother s death by raping Titus daughter Lavinia After the rape they cut off her hands and tongue in order that she cannot tell anyone what has happened With each tragedy Titus sinks lower and lower and begins to act strangely and is assumed to be crazy from grief Having feigned madness Titus tricks Tamora inviting her and the Emperor for dinner Unbeknownst to them Titus has captured and killed Tamora s two sons and has made them into a pie This he feeds to the two before killing both Tamora and Lavinia A veritable massacre ensues leaving only a handful of characters live Having returned from banishment and assuming the mantle of Emperor Titus son has the solo living progeny of Tamora buried alive and Tamora s corpse thrown to the wolves Other examples edit Elizabethan and Jacobean writers employed as many of these features as their plots allowed and freely made variations in them Revenge tragedy caught their imagination and writers attempted plays of this genre with their own variations of dramaturgy Shakespeare raised his revenge tragedy to a high intellectual and philosophical level by making Hamlet a virtuous sensitive scholar Cyril Tourneur exploited the morbid and melodramatic in The Atheists Tragedy 1611 John Webster reversed the moral position of avengers and victims In The White Devil and The Duchess of Malfi the victims of the so called revenge are heroic women and the avengers blood thirsty villains In The Duchess of Malfi 1623 the main characters plot to kill their widowed sister who secretly marries without their consent Christopher Crosbie s book explores the connection between early modern revenge tragedies and underlying philosophical influences aiming to unveil how these plays addressed ontological questions rooted in classical philosophy He delves into specific works such as Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy Shakespeare s Titus Andronicus Hamlet John Marston s Antonio s Revenge and John Webster s The Duchess of Malfi highlighting the philosophical elements woven into the fabric of these dramas Crosbie s in depth analysis reveals how concepts from Aristotle Galen Lucretius and Stoicism are interwoven into the plays shedding new light on the philosophical underpinnings of early modern revenge tragedies 11 Other examples of revenge tragedies include The Jew of Malta 1589 Christopher Marlowe Antonio s Revenge 1600 John Marston and The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois 1613 George Chapman In his essay Of Revenge Francis Bacon wrote This is certain that a man studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green which otherwise would heal and do well 12 References edit a b Thorndike A H The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary Revenge Plays Modern Language Association 17 2 1902 125 220 Print Danson Lawrence Shakespeare s Dramatic Genres Oxford University Press Oxford 2000 Print p 11 The First Folio printed after his death was also prepared by Shakespeare s colleagues John Heminges and Henry Condell REVENGE TRAGEDY SOCIETY S MIRROR OR THE PORNOGRAPHY OF VIOLENCE THE CAMBRIDGE CRITIQUE 2020 04 06 Retrieved 2023 11 10 Campbell Lily Theories of Revenge in Renaissance England Modern Philology 28 3 1931 281 296 Print Engle Lars Introduction to The Duchess of Malfi The Duchess of Malfi By John Webster English Renaissance Drama Eds David Bevington et al Norton New York 2002 1749 1754 Print p 1749 Weis Rene Introduction John Webster The Duchess of Malfi and Other Plays By John Webster Oxford University Press Oxford 1996 ix xxviii Print p xxiii Alkhaleefah Tarek A The Senecan Tragedy and its Adaptation for the Elizabethan Stage A Study of Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy International Journal of English and Literature 6 9 Sept 2015 163 167 Print Alchin Linda K William Shakespeare William Shakespeare Retrieved 24 October 2015 Cohen Derek 1993 Shakespeare s Culture of Violence London St Martins Knapp James A 2020 05 01 Revenge Tragedy and Classical Philosophy on the Early Modern Stage Christopher Crosbie Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2019 Pp vii 310 Modern Philology 117 4 E237 E239 doi 10 1086 708344 ISSN 0026 8232 Bacon Francis 2010 The New Atlantis and The City of the Sun Kessinger Publishing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revenge tragedy amp oldid 1210676511, 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