Performing Chastity: The Marina Project

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Abstract

If chastity has for generations served the needs and desires of men, can it still be taken seriously as a virtue? Dismissed in the west as a medieval superstition, or, at best, as a means of escape from an intolerable situation, chastity seems a worn-out version of goodness which belongs in the past. Putting forward a new reading of Pericles (1609), this chapter opens up chastity as forgotten version of agency which, in the most surprising ways, enables new kinds of assertion and affirmation. It offers an account of the Marina Project, an ongoing creative-critical collaboration with the Royal Shakespeare Company, which has resulted in the creation of a new play entitled Marina. Both the project and the play prioritize the perspective of the protagonist’s daughter, Marina, who powerfully and triumphantly refuses to play the game where women are sold to men. Chastity emerges as a specifically female and remarkably direct kind of action which overturns the withdrawal implied by obedience to a patriarchal frame. Marina’s "radical chastity" disrupts our sense of the way things have to be, opening up a constellation of important issues today.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationShakespeare and Virtue
Subtitle of host publicationA Handbook
EditorsJulia Reinhard Lupton, Donovan Sherman
PublisherCambridge University Press
Chapter36
Pages360-368
Number of pages9
ISBN (Electronic)9781108918589
ISBN (Print)9781108843409
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • Chastity
  • feminism
  • agency
  • performance
  • creative-critical

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