Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain

Theatrical presentation of character relies on embodiment and mimesis where the novel constructs plausible character through the diegetic presentation of consciousness and action. This article argues that, with the introduction of stage censorship in the 1730s, allegorical prose romance mediates the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ballaster, R
Format: Journal article
Published: McMaster University 2015
_version_ 1826258898216026112
author Ballaster, R
author_facet Ballaster, R
author_sort Ballaster, R
collection OXFORD
description Theatrical presentation of character relies on embodiment and mimesis where the novel constructs plausible character through the diegetic presentation of consciousness and action. This article argues that, with the introduction of stage censorship in the 1730s, allegorical prose romance mediates the transition from theatrical to novelistic modes of rendering plausible embodied character. Theatre and the novel in the mid-eighteenth century share a preoccupation with the relation of embodiment to allegorical abstraction, often represented in the figure of the Quixote, who mistakes one for the other. This essay charts the translation of techniques found in Henry Fielding’s satirical allegory in his short stage plays of the 1730s with three allegorical romances of 1736 that take Frederick, Prince of Wales, and his new bride, Princess Augusta of Saxa-Gothe-Altenburg, as the hero and heroine: Celenia and Hyempsal, The Adventures of Prince Titi, and The Adventures of Eovaai. Discursive play with the magical reincarnation of “dead” figures in new forms of embodiment—puppets, ghosts, supernatural visitation—is central to these acts of generic transformation. Allegory, as we see in Sarah Fielding and Jane Collier’s The Cry (1754), has an unacknowledged afterlife in the mid-century novel.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:41:18Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:0cf37df5-4331-44d3-b41a-c16ecd31791e
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:41:18Z
publishDate 2015
publisher McMaster University
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:0cf37df5-4331-44d3-b41a-c16ecd31791e2022-03-26T09:37:54ZSatire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century BritainJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0cf37df5-4331-44d3-b41a-c16ecd31791eSymplectic Elements at OxfordMcMaster University2015Ballaster, RTheatrical presentation of character relies on embodiment and mimesis where the novel constructs plausible character through the diegetic presentation of consciousness and action. This article argues that, with the introduction of stage censorship in the 1730s, allegorical prose romance mediates the transition from theatrical to novelistic modes of rendering plausible embodied character. Theatre and the novel in the mid-eighteenth century share a preoccupation with the relation of embodiment to allegorical abstraction, often represented in the figure of the Quixote, who mistakes one for the other. This essay charts the translation of techniques found in Henry Fielding’s satirical allegory in his short stage plays of the 1730s with three allegorical romances of 1736 that take Frederick, Prince of Wales, and his new bride, Princess Augusta of Saxa-Gothe-Altenburg, as the hero and heroine: Celenia and Hyempsal, The Adventures of Prince Titi, and The Adventures of Eovaai. Discursive play with the magical reincarnation of “dead” figures in new forms of embodiment—puppets, ghosts, supernatural visitation—is central to these acts of generic transformation. Allegory, as we see in Sarah Fielding and Jane Collier’s The Cry (1754), has an unacknowledged afterlife in the mid-century novel.
spellingShingle Ballaster, R
Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title_full Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title_fullStr Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title_full_unstemmed Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title_short Satire and embodiment: allegorical romance on stage and page in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
title_sort satire and embodiment allegorical romance on stage and page in mid eighteenth century britain
work_keys_str_mv AT ballasterr satireandembodimentallegoricalromanceonstageandpageinmideighteenthcenturybritain