2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0730.2010.00989.x
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Categorical Transgression in Marlovian Death and Damnation

Abstract: Appropriately for the products of a notoriously ambivalent cultural institution, the stage plays of Christopher Marlowe exploit the anxiety endemic in Elizabethan culture concerning the vulnerability of categorical boundaries. Often studied from the perspectives of gender, this categorical anxiety is more insistently provoked in relation to species, with human suffering and death regularly encompassing degradation to animal or vegetable status, and even beyond, to cooking, consumption and digestion. Edward II … Show more

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