Reproductive politics and parental economies in Titus Andronicus
Journal cover Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, volume 58, no. 1, year 2023
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Keywords

maternal authority in Shakespeare
pregnant embodiment in English early modern drama
paternal authority in Shakespeare
race and gender in reproductive discourses in early modern England
reproductive and paternal economies in Shakespeare

How to Cite

Burzyńska, K. (2023). Reproductive politics and parental economies in Titus Andronicus. Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, 58(1), 73–108. https://doi.org/10.14746/stap.2023.58.06

Abstract

Tamora, Queen of the Goths in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus (1594), belongs to a relatively substantial canon of pregnant characters in English early modern drama. Her pregnant embodiment has generated less critical interest than the pregnancies and maternities of later tragic heroines.  In this paper I wish to reread Tamora’s non-normative pregnancy and her maternal authority against a tenuously established consensus on reproduction and maternity in the period. Thus, my primary aim is to trace Tamora’s monstrous gestational body as a locus of the discursive triangularity of gender, race, and reproduction. Tamora is a devoted and passionate mother to her adult sons but her mothering is complicated by her pregnancy and a problematic child product, a result of her relationship with Aaron. I wish to look at Tamora’s pregnancy in conjunction with her maternal practices, albeit keeping the gestational experience as distinct and separate from her motherhood. Tamora’s pregnant embodiment is further complicated by the birthing ritual glimpsed in the play. I argue that by materializing the dreaded fruit of miscegenation in and through the reproductive body, the play demonstrates the threatening porosity of the emerging gender-race system.  By circumventing maternal authority, the play also unveils the vulnerability of the supposedly sacrosanct, female-exclusive ritual to external male violations. Rather than confirming the ritual’s universality, the play problematizes maternal and paternal authority at the backdrop of deep-seated fears of racial bodily difference.

https://doi.org/10.14746/stap.2023.58.06
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Funding

This paper is part of a research project “Sir, she came in great with child, and longing”: phenomenology of pregnancy in English early modern drama (Measure for Measure2.1.96)” funded by The National Science Centre, Poland within OPUS 14 framework (No. UMO-2017/27/B/HS2/00089).

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