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020 ▼a 9781392555880
035 ▼a (MiAaPQ)AAI27544994
040 ▼a MiAaPQ ▼c MiAaPQ ▼d 247004
0820 ▼a 390
1001 ▼a McCarthy, Katelyn .
24510 ▼a Reading the Double Bind: The Death of the Good Woman in Early Modern Literature.
260 ▼a [S.l.]: ▼b University of Minnesota., ▼c 2019.
260 1 ▼a Ann Arbor: ▼b ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, ▼c 2019.
300 ▼a 202 p.
500 ▼a Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-06, Section: A.
500 ▼a Advisor: Watkins, John.
5021 ▼a Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Minnesota, 2019.
506 ▼a This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
520 ▼a Many early modern literary texts end with dead women. These texts stage a paradox endemic to a system which denies the possibility of the chaste, silent, and obedient paradigm it claims to venerate. Women are not simply punished for their transgressions but compelled to transgress by the unattainability of goodness. Women must prove their virtue in a system predicated on denying it. I begin with an analysis of late medieval virgin martyr legends. In privileging holiness over obedience to men, these women are simultaneously welcomed into heaven by God and executed as bad women who have divested from the social system that deems them so. This divestment is the very thing that makes their legacy so difficult to replicate by women who must prove their goodness to the same authority that accuses them of wickedness. Second, I turn to Shakespeare's The Rape of Lucrece, Titus Andronicus, and Othello. I argue that Lucrece, Lavinia, and Desdemona are not simply literary victims of circumstance, but reflections of a material phenomenon that eroticizes women's virtue, demands women's violation, and compels their death despite their testimony. Their testimony can never be heard by the same authority that endangers them. Third, I turn to Elizabeth Cary's The Tragedy of Mariam in order to deconstruct the Mariam/Salome foil-to trouble the dichotomies that inhere in such a formulation: chaste/unchaste, moral/wicked, sacred/profane. I argue that Mariam is underwritten less by a foil and more by a double bind-Mariam is trapped within a system that demands the virtue that endangers her, despises the disobedience that protects her, and compels her death as proof of innocence. Finally, I turn to the social pamphlets of the Jacobean querelle de femmes, or the public debate about the nature of woman. I argue that the writers who successfully defend women's virtue do so by relying on rhetorical strategy rather than personal testimony. Without testifying, these writers weaponize the double bind against itself and turn to the Bible as evidence, casting aside what does not serve them and writing their own redemptive biblical exegesis.
590 ▼a School code: 0130.
650 4 ▼a English literature.
650 4 ▼a Modern literature.
650 4 ▼a Womens studies.
690 ▼a 0593
690 ▼a 0453
690 ▼a 0298
71020 ▼a University of Minnesota. ▼b English.
7730 ▼t Dissertations Abstracts International ▼g 81-06A.
773 ▼t Dissertation Abstract International
790 ▼a 0130
791 ▼a Ph.D.
792 ▼a 2019
793 ▼a English
85640 ▼u http://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T15494494 ▼n KERIS ▼z 이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.
980 ▼a 202002 ▼f 2020
990 ▼a ***1008102
991 ▼a E-BOOK