{"title":"Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama by Daisy Black (review)","authors":"Christopher Swift","doi":"10.1353/tj.2024.a929537","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama</em> by Daisy Black <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Christopher Swift </li> </ul> <em>Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism And Temporality In Medieval Biblical Drama</em>. By Daisy Black. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020; pp. 248. <p>On the subject of late medieval English plays, Daisy Black’s <em>Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama</em> gambols among three important critical inquiries from the last few decades. The author conducts close readings of four canonical dramas and situates her readings in conversation with a dazzling array of theorists and historians in medieval studies. Her original contribution to the study of medieval biblical drama is her engagement with gender and critical race studies to uncover subjective experiences of time that disrupted the linear, supersessionary models from the Bible. Black argues that rebellious, heterodox, and ignoble characters, and the incongruous juxtaposition of stage and scriptural time, offered audiences unique experiences of familiar religious stories. By staging these alternative renditions in pedestrian spaces outside the jurisdiction of the Church, the lay producers disrupted the typology of Christian history.</p> <p>Informed by Carolyn Dinshaw, Jonathan Gil Harris, and Kathleen Davis, among others, Black employs spatial and somatic metaphors for understanding diverse theatricalizations of time. Black focuses on characters in English drama who subvert the Christian supersessionary model by expressing the sense of time as it pauses, meanders, repeats, remembers, and folds in on itself. She writes that “negotiations of time lie behind some of the most fraught depictions of conflict staged between biblical characters” (12), describing the ways in which the subjective experiences of time by those characters resist orthodoxy. Since conventional typologies of Christian history underscored the inevitability of the sacrifice of Christ, moments that undermined these typologies would have been compellingly affective. Importantly, Black demonstrates how these irregular figures of temporality confounded hegemonic constructions of gender and antisemitic tropes from the period. Alternative temporalities in the plays were revealed in scenes of conflict between men and women, Christians and non-Christians, and characters sacred and profane.</p> <p>The dramatization of the domestic relationship of Joseph and Mary in the N-Town manuscript is the subject of chapter 1. As was typical in many medieval narratives, Joseph’s Jewishness is characterized by his impotent, aging body and doubts about Mary’s miraculous pregnancy. In the drama, the antisemitic attribute of intractable literalness contrasts with the ethereal, vessel-like quality of Mary. <em>Joseph’s Doubt</em> resolves when Joseph abandons his carnal attachments and enters into Christian time as the adoptive father of the unborn Christ. While some critics have argued that the play is a conventional reprisal of the inferiority of Hebrew law, Black’s careful parsing of the text suggests that “what might have been a straightforward, linear conversion narrative snags on the ambiguous nature of Christian time” (66). Ambivalence is at the heart of Christian preoccupation with supersession of the New Testament over the Hebrew Bible, a hermeneutic that builds on Jewish history while attempting to obscure it. Rather than undermining an immutable doctrine, the plays exploited theological fragilities inherent in biblical typology. In chapter 2, the character conflicts between Noah and his wife in the York <em>Noah</em> undermine supersessionary time by blurring the lines between past and present. Noah’s wife is a “disruptive voice,” who, like other female-gendered characters from the Bible, expresses disobedience toward her husband and to God. Black first aligns herself with interpretations of the character as an “unruly other” who is ultimately disciplined by the diluvian story. She then complicates this reading by showing how Noah’s wife’s refusal to forget the quickly vanishing past undermines her husband’s attempt to move forward, as God erases (nearly all of) creation.</p> <p>In her discussion of multiple, queer experiences of time in the Towneley manuscript’s <em>Second Shepherds’ Play,</em> Black makes a meaningful contribution to the study of one of the most well-known plays of medieval England. Without diminishing the value of the other subjects of the book, this chapter was, for me, the most engaging. In wonderful detail, Black illustrates Christian anxieties about flesh, sexuality, reproduction, and consumption beneath Eucharistic and incarnational symbology. In the play, a Bahktinian <strong> [End Page 132...</strong></p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2024.a929537","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama by Daisy Black
Christopher Swift
Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism And Temporality In Medieval Biblical Drama. By Daisy Black. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020; pp. 248.
On the subject of late medieval English plays, Daisy Black’s Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama gambols among three important critical inquiries from the last few decades. The author conducts close readings of four canonical dramas and situates her readings in conversation with a dazzling array of theorists and historians in medieval studies. Her original contribution to the study of medieval biblical drama is her engagement with gender and critical race studies to uncover subjective experiences of time that disrupted the linear, supersessionary models from the Bible. Black argues that rebellious, heterodox, and ignoble characters, and the incongruous juxtaposition of stage and scriptural time, offered audiences unique experiences of familiar religious stories. By staging these alternative renditions in pedestrian spaces outside the jurisdiction of the Church, the lay producers disrupted the typology of Christian history.
Informed by Carolyn Dinshaw, Jonathan Gil Harris, and Kathleen Davis, among others, Black employs spatial and somatic metaphors for understanding diverse theatricalizations of time. Black focuses on characters in English drama who subvert the Christian supersessionary model by expressing the sense of time as it pauses, meanders, repeats, remembers, and folds in on itself. She writes that “negotiations of time lie behind some of the most fraught depictions of conflict staged between biblical characters” (12), describing the ways in which the subjective experiences of time by those characters resist orthodoxy. Since conventional typologies of Christian history underscored the inevitability of the sacrifice of Christ, moments that undermined these typologies would have been compellingly affective. Importantly, Black demonstrates how these irregular figures of temporality confounded hegemonic constructions of gender and antisemitic tropes from the period. Alternative temporalities in the plays were revealed in scenes of conflict between men and women, Christians and non-Christians, and characters sacred and profane.
The dramatization of the domestic relationship of Joseph and Mary in the N-Town manuscript is the subject of chapter 1. As was typical in many medieval narratives, Joseph’s Jewishness is characterized by his impotent, aging body and doubts about Mary’s miraculous pregnancy. In the drama, the antisemitic attribute of intractable literalness contrasts with the ethereal, vessel-like quality of Mary. Joseph’s Doubt resolves when Joseph abandons his carnal attachments and enters into Christian time as the adoptive father of the unborn Christ. While some critics have argued that the play is a conventional reprisal of the inferiority of Hebrew law, Black’s careful parsing of the text suggests that “what might have been a straightforward, linear conversion narrative snags on the ambiguous nature of Christian time” (66). Ambivalence is at the heart of Christian preoccupation with supersession of the New Testament over the Hebrew Bible, a hermeneutic that builds on Jewish history while attempting to obscure it. Rather than undermining an immutable doctrine, the plays exploited theological fragilities inherent in biblical typology. In chapter 2, the character conflicts between Noah and his wife in the York Noah undermine supersessionary time by blurring the lines between past and present. Noah’s wife is a “disruptive voice,” who, like other female-gendered characters from the Bible, expresses disobedience toward her husband and to God. Black first aligns herself with interpretations of the character as an “unruly other” who is ultimately disciplined by the diluvian story. She then complicates this reading by showing how Noah’s wife’s refusal to forget the quickly vanishing past undermines her husband’s attempt to move forward, as God erases (nearly all of) creation.
In her discussion of multiple, queer experiences of time in the Towneley manuscript’s Second Shepherds’ Play, Black makes a meaningful contribution to the study of one of the most well-known plays of medieval England. Without diminishing the value of the other subjects of the book, this chapter was, for me, the most engaging. In wonderful detail, Black illustrates Christian anxieties about flesh, sexuality, reproduction, and consumption beneath Eucharistic and incarnational symbology. In the play, a Bahktinian [End Page 132...
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism and Temporality in Medieval Biblical Drama by Daisy Black Christopher Swift Play Time: Gender, Anti-Semitism And Temporality In Medieval Biblical Drama.作者:黛西-布莱克。曼彻斯特:曼彻斯特大学出版社,2020 年;第 248 页。关于中世纪晚期英国戏剧的主题,黛西-布莱克的《游戏时间:中世纪圣经戏剧中的性别、反犹太主义和时间性》在过去几十年的三部重要批评研究著作中博弈。作者对四部经典戏剧进行了近距离解读,并将她的解读与中世纪研究领域众多理论家和历史学家进行了对话。她对中世纪圣经戏剧研究的独创性贡献在于,她与性别研究和批判性种族研究相结合,揭示了时间的主观体验,这些主观体验打破了《圣经》中的线性、超越性模式。布莱克认为,叛逆、异端和无耻的角色,以及舞台与圣经时间的不协调并置,为观众提供了对熟悉的宗教故事的独特体验。通过在教会管辖范围之外的步行空间上演这些另类演绎,非专业制作人打破了基督教历史的类型学。布莱克在卡罗琳-丁肖、乔纳森-吉尔-哈里斯和凯瑟琳-戴维斯等人的启发下,运用空间和躯体隐喻来理解不同的时间戏剧化。布莱克重点研究了英国戏剧中的人物,他们通过表达时间的停顿、蜿蜒、重复、记忆和折叠,颠覆了基督教的超时空模式。她写道:"在《圣经》人物之间上演的一些最激烈的冲突描写背后,都隐藏着对时间的协商"(12),描述了这些人物对时间的主观体验是如何抵制正统观念的。由于基督教历史的传统类型学强调了基督牺牲的必然性,因此破坏这些类型学的时刻就会具有引人注目的感染力。重要的是,布莱克展示了这些不规则的时间性人物是如何与当时的性别霸权结构和反犹主义套路相冲突的。剧中男女、基督徒与非基督徒以及神圣与亵渎人物之间的冲突场面揭示了另一种时间性。N-Town 手稿中约瑟夫和马利亚家庭关系的戏剧化是第 1 章的主题。与许多中世纪叙事中的典型情况一样,约瑟夫的犹太特征是他阳痿、衰老的身体以及对玛丽神奇怀孕的怀疑。在剧中,反犹太特性中顽固的字面意义与马利亚空灵、容器般的品质形成了鲜明对比。当约瑟夫放弃肉体的执着,以未出生基督养父的身份进入基督教时代时,约瑟夫的疑惑便迎刃而解。虽然一些评论家认为该剧是对希伯来律法劣根性的传统反击,但布莱克对文本的细致解析表明,"原本可能是直截了当的线性皈依叙事,却因基督教时间的模糊性而陷入困境"(66)。矛盾性是基督教关注《新约圣经》取代《希伯来圣经》的核心所在,这种诠释学建立在犹太历史之上,同时又试图掩盖犹太历史。这些戏剧并没有破坏一成不变的教义,而是利用了《圣经》类型学中固有的神学弱点。在第 2 章中,《约克-诺亚》中诺亚与妻子之间的性格冲突模糊了过去与现在的界限,从而破坏了超时代的时间。诺亚的妻子是一个 "破坏性的声音",她与《圣经》中其他女性角色一样,表达了对丈夫和上帝的不服从。布莱克首先赞同将诺亚的妻子解释为 "不守规矩的另类",她最终受到了迪鲁维故事的约束。然后,她展示了诺亚的妻子如何拒绝忘记迅速消失的过去,从而破坏了她丈夫向前迈进的尝试,因为上帝抹掉了(几乎所有的)创造物,从而使这一解读变得更加复杂。布莱克在讨论汤尼手稿《牧羊人的第二部戏剧》中的多重、同性恋时间体验时,为研究英国中世纪最著名的戏剧之一做出了有意义的贡献。在不贬低本书其他主题价值的前提下,这一章对我来说是最吸引人的。布莱克以精彩的细节说明了基督教在圣餐和道成肉身的象征意义下对肉体、性、生殖和消费的焦虑。在剧中,一个巴赫金尼 [尾页 132...
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For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.