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Medea Magic And Modernity In France Amy Wygant

  • SKU: BELL-1381896
Medea Magic And Modernity In France Amy Wygant
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Medea Magic And Modernity In France Amy Wygant instant download after payment.

Publisher: Ashgate
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.84 MB
Pages: 228
Author: Amy Wygant
ISBN: 9780754659242, 0754659240
Language: English
Year: 2007

Product desciption

Medea Magic And Modernity In France Amy Wygant by Amy Wygant 9780754659242, 0754659240 instant download after payment.

Bringing together the previously disparate fields of historical witchcraft, reception history, poetics, and psychoanalysis, this innovative study shows how the glamour of the historical witch, a spell that she cast, was set on a course, over a span of three hundred years from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries, to become a generally broadcast glamour of appearance. Something that a woman does, that is, became something that she has. The antique heroine Medea, witch and barbarian, infamous poisoner, infanticide, regicide, scourge of philanderers, and indefatigable traveller, serves as the vehicle of this development. Revived on the stage of modernity by La Peruse in the sixteenth century, Corneille in the seventeenth, and the operatic composer Cherubini in the eighteenth, her stagecraft and her witchcraft combine, author Amy Wygant argues, to stun her audience into identifying with her magic and making it their own. In contrast to previous studies which have relied upon contemporary printed sources in order to gauge audience participation in and reaction to early modern theater, Wygant argues that psychoanalytic thought about the behaviour of groups can be brought to bear on the question of ''what happened'' when the early modern witch was staged. This cross-disciplinary study reveals the surprising early modern trajectory of our contemporary obsession with magic. Medea figures the movement of culture in history, and in the mirror of the witch on the stage, a mirror both appealing and appalling, our own cultural performances are reflected. It concludes with an analysis of Diderot's claim that the historical process itself is magical, and with the moment in Revolutionary France when the slight and fragile body of the golden-throated singer, Julie-Angelique Scio, became a Medea for modernity: not a witch or a child-murderess, but, as all the press reviews insist, a woman.

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