Scripting the Witch. Voice, Gender and Power in The Witch of Edmonton (Rowley, Dekker and Ford 1621) and Witchcraft (Baillie 1836)
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10070Date
2016-11-02Type
Master thesisMastergradsoppgave
Author
Handley, JanetAbstract
The current thesis compares two plays based on historical witchcraft trials of the
seventeenth century in England and Scotland, respectively: The Witch of Edmonton
(1621) by Rowley, Dekker and Ford, and Witchcraft (1836) by Joanna Baillie. The
plays are examined in order to establish why these two plays stage the witch; how the
witch is staged; and what the staging of the witch communicates regarding power and
gender. The theoretical perspective is provided by the theories of Michel Foucault and
Simone de Beauvoir. The study finds that both plays not only actively employ
historical witchcraft narratives but also expose the social mechanisms behind them.
By staging witch characters and giving them individual voices, the plays direct their
criticism at all levels of society. Thus the witch characters become more than
disempowered victims. Although they are forced by a social script to take on the role
of the witch, the role restores a degree of power to them. These aspects find resonance
in Foucault’s concept of power and performance, whereas de Beauvoir’s concept of
the “Eternal Feminine” complements and illustrates how the cultural construction of
gender influences the limited choice open to the witch characters.
Acknowledgements
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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Copyright 2016 The Author(s)
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