Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
“Poison on, Monsters”: Female Poisoners in Early Modern Roman Tragedies
-
Emanuel Stelzer
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Introduction: Roman Women in Early Modern English Drama 1
- “Rome’s Rich Ornament”: Lavinia, Commoditization, and the Senses in William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus 19
- Blending Motherhoods: Volumnia and the Representation of Maternity in William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus 39
- “Silent, Not as a Foole”: William Shakespeare’s Roman Women and Early Modern Tropes of Feminine Silence 59
- “Timidae obsequantur”: Mothers and Wives in Matthew Gwinne’s Nero 79
- “Let Me Use All My Pleasures”: The Ovidian Courtship of the Emperor’s Daughter in Ben Jonson’s Poetaster 99
- “Few Wise Women’s Honesties”: Dialoguing with Roman Women in Ben Jonson’s Roman Plays 119
- Ben Jonson’s and Thomas May’s “Political Ladies”: Forms of Female Political Agency 141
- Bawds, Wives, and Foreigners: The Question of Female Agency in the Roman Plays of the Fletcher Canon 165
- “The Beauties of the Time”: Roman Women in Philip Massinger’s The Roman Actor 185
- “Poison on, Monsters”: Female Poisoners in Early Modern Roman Tragedies 207
- Notes on Contributors 227
- Index 231
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Introduction: Roman Women in Early Modern English Drama 1
- “Rome’s Rich Ornament”: Lavinia, Commoditization, and the Senses in William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus 19
- Blending Motherhoods: Volumnia and the Representation of Maternity in William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus 39
- “Silent, Not as a Foole”: William Shakespeare’s Roman Women and Early Modern Tropes of Feminine Silence 59
- “Timidae obsequantur”: Mothers and Wives in Matthew Gwinne’s Nero 79
- “Let Me Use All My Pleasures”: The Ovidian Courtship of the Emperor’s Daughter in Ben Jonson’s Poetaster 99
- “Few Wise Women’s Honesties”: Dialoguing with Roman Women in Ben Jonson’s Roman Plays 119
- Ben Jonson’s and Thomas May’s “Political Ladies”: Forms of Female Political Agency 141
- Bawds, Wives, and Foreigners: The Question of Female Agency in the Roman Plays of the Fletcher Canon 165
- “The Beauties of the Time”: Roman Women in Philip Massinger’s The Roman Actor 185
- “Poison on, Monsters”: Female Poisoners in Early Modern Roman Tragedies 207
- Notes on Contributors 227
- Index 231