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Racine

Language, Violence and Power

by Mary Reilly (Author)
©2005 Monographs 142 Pages

Summary

What is the nature of power in Racinian tragedy? Few questions have generated such widespread critical disagreement. This study looks beyond the conventional pageant of political power in the plays by exploring tensions inherent in the very concept of power. Each chapter elucidates how Racine’s power relationships are concentrated in the question of language. His characters seek to discover, channel and control the thoughts of others by means of a careful manipulation of the word. The limits of language and the way it can be distorted and controlled rather than its expressiveness are shown to be crucial to Racine’s power struggles. This book examines Racine’s portrayal of the disintegration of the processes of thought by means of linguistic engineering, showing how it mirrors the absolutist policies of Louis XIV and foreshadows more recent anxieties about the use and abuse of language in our own time. It therefore provides a new reading of Racine’s use of language which challenges previous critical responses. The emphasis throughout is on close engagement with the text.

Details

Pages
142
Year
2005
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039102860
Language
English
Keywords
Racine, Jean Tragödie Orwell Language (manipulation of) Power relationships Seventeenth-Century theatre French Theatre under Louis XIV Violence Racine
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2005. 140 pp.

Biographical notes

Mary Reilly (Author)

The Author: Mary Reilly completed a doctoral thesis on seventeenth-century French theatre at the University of Glasgow and is now Senior Lecturer in French Studies at Manchester Metropolitan University where she lectures on comparative seventeenth- and twentieth-century French literature.

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Title: Racine