BOOKS - Playing with Desire: Christopher Marlowe and the Art of Tantalization
US $6.52
106316
106316
Playing with Desire: Christopher Marlowe and the Art of Tantalization
Author: Fred B. Tromly
Year: December 26, 1998
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 12 MB
Language: English
Year: December 26, 1998
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 12 MB
Language: English
Playing with Desire takes a new approach to Christopher Marlowe's body of writing, replacing the view of Marlovian desire as heroic aspiration with a far less uplifting model. Fred B. Tromly shows that in Marlowe's writing desire is a response to calculated, teasing enticement, ultimately a sign not of power but of impotence. The author identifies this desire with the sadistic irony of the Tantalus myth rather than with the sublime tragedy exemplified by the familiar figure of Icarus. Thus, Marlowe's characteristic mis en scene is moved from the heavens to the netherworld. Tromly also demonstrates that the manipulations of desire among Marlowe's characters find close parallels in the strategies by which his works tantalize and frustrate their audiences. Closely examining all the plays and the major poems, the author deploys a variety of resources - Renaissance mythography, the study of literary sources (especially Ovid), comparisons with contemporary writers, performance history, and social history - to demonstrate how central Tantalus and tantalizing are to Marlowe's imagination.