"WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE

This article deals with the corporeal consequences of violence in two selected works of the Irish playwright Sean O’Casey, The Plough and the Stars (1926) and The Silver Tassie (1928). By focusing on the concepts of analysis of violence brought forth by Sarah Cole, the acts of bodily destruction in...

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Main Author: Ketlyn Mara Rosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Paraná 2020-12-01
Series:Revista X
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.ufpr.br/revistax/article/view/74750
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spelling doaj-a5282d530152408db49750369c7328fc2021-08-10T14:48:45ZengUniversidade Federal do ParanáRevista X1980-06141980-06142020-12-0115749550710.5380/rvx.v15i7.7475033893"WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIEKetlyn Mara Rosa0Trinity College DublinThis article deals with the corporeal consequences of violence in two selected works of the Irish playwright Sean O’Casey, The Plough and the Stars (1926) and The Silver Tassie (1928). By focusing on the concepts of analysis of violence brought forth by Sarah Cole, the acts of bodily destruction in O’Casey’s works can be understood as portraying enchanted and disenchanted facets. The damage done to the human body is represented in complex ways in both plays as they demonstrate an intentional mixture of these two types of violence. Enchanted violence is perceived with the glorification of sacrifice while the physical consequences of destruction are hidden from sight whereas disenchanted violence insists on pointing out the hurt body, the grotesque side of pain that debunks any sense of heroism from battle. By analyzing passages from the plays in which physical violence becomes the focal point, the historical contexts of each play, the Easter Rising of 1916 and the First World War, are enlightened in a way that puts the body of the participants and their vivid experiences on the forefront, enhancing the sense of wastefulness and loss caused by armed conflicts.https://revistas.ufpr.br/revistax/article/view/74750irish theatercorporeal violencewar.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ketlyn Mara Rosa
spellingShingle Ketlyn Mara Rosa
"WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
Revista X
irish theater
corporeal violence
war.
author_facet Ketlyn Mara Rosa
author_sort Ketlyn Mara Rosa
title "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
title_short "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
title_full "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
title_fullStr "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
title_full_unstemmed "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A SHELL LANDED HERE NOW"? CORPOREAL VIOLENCE IN SEAN O'CASEY'S THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS AND THE SILVER TASSIE
title_sort "what would happen if a shell landed here now"? corporeal violence in sean o'casey's the plough and the stars and the silver tassie
publisher Universidade Federal do Paraná
series Revista X
issn 1980-0614
1980-0614
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This article deals with the corporeal consequences of violence in two selected works of the Irish playwright Sean O’Casey, The Plough and the Stars (1926) and The Silver Tassie (1928). By focusing on the concepts of analysis of violence brought forth by Sarah Cole, the acts of bodily destruction in O’Casey’s works can be understood as portraying enchanted and disenchanted facets. The damage done to the human body is represented in complex ways in both plays as they demonstrate an intentional mixture of these two types of violence. Enchanted violence is perceived with the glorification of sacrifice while the physical consequences of destruction are hidden from sight whereas disenchanted violence insists on pointing out the hurt body, the grotesque side of pain that debunks any sense of heroism from battle. By analyzing passages from the plays in which physical violence becomes the focal point, the historical contexts of each play, the Easter Rising of 1916 and the First World War, are enlightened in a way that puts the body of the participants and their vivid experiences on the forefront, enhancing the sense of wastefulness and loss caused by armed conflicts.
topic irish theater
corporeal violence
war.
url https://revistas.ufpr.br/revistax/article/view/74750
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