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“A Weight of Carrion Flesh”: Measuring Disgust, Shakespearean Mimesis

  • Autores: Zenón Luis Martínez
  • Localización: European Journal of anatomy, ISSN-e 1136-4890, Vol. 24, Nº. Extra 1 ('On Disgust'), 2020 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Supplement 1), págs. 51-62
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The present article argues that a Shakespearean poetics of disgust unveils a deeper concern in his work with the moral and social limits of the emo-tions. The essay first looks into a well-known trea-tise on physiology and psychology, Thomas Wright’s The Passions of the Minde in Generall (1601, 1604), in relation to Renaissance theories of poetry and Shakespeare’s figurations of disgust in Hamlet (1601), King Lear (1604), The Winter’s Tale (1611) and Timon of Athens (1607). Its aim is to explore the capacity of metaphors and tropes, in both medical and poetic discourse, to test affective intensity, as measuring the passions was consid-ered a necessary condition for moral and social well-being. In Shakespeare’s plays the moral di-mension of disgust is often put to question by the aesthetic element inherent in poetic mimesis, which tends to depict the disgusting as a source of pleasure. The essay’s second part turns to The Merchant of Venice (1596) to assess, through the trajectories of disgust that sustain the rivalry be-tween the merchant Antonio and the moneylender Shylock, a second notion of mimesis: the envious emulation of others’ ways of feeling that cultural theorists like René Girard (1991) have signposted as the core of Shakespeare’s modernity. In broad-er terms, this study points to the centrality of the these two notions of mimesis for an understanding of the early modern phenomenology of the emo-tions.


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