Maternity, Monstrosity, and Heroic (Im)mortality from Homer to Shakespeare
Title
Maternity, Monstrosity, and Heroic (Im)mortality from Homer to Shakespeare
Price
€ 136,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789463728980
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
336
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 135,99
Table of Contents
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Introduction
Part I: Mother, Warrior, Monster
Chapter 1. The Monstrosity of Woman and Belly
Chapter 2. The Warrior at War
Chapter 3. Engendering the Hero: Destruction, Generation, and Kleos Aphthiton
Part II: Troy and Its Aftermath: Mothers, Warriors, and Monsters in the Ancient World
Chapter 4. For the Sake of Helen
Chapter 5. Clytemnestra and the Furies
Chapter 6. Hecuba, Queen of Troy
Part III: Elizabethan Anxieties: Mothers, Warriors, and Monsters in Shakespeare
Introduction Shakespeare and the Iliadic Belly-Monstrous
Chapter 7. Titus Andronicus: Authorizing Warrior and Monster
Chapter 8. 1–3 Henry VI and Richard III: The Mother’s Creatures
Chapter 9. Coriolanus: A Return to the Source

Sara Burdorff

Maternity, Monstrosity, and Heroic (Im)mortality from Homer to Shakespeare

This work uses an adaptation of monster theory to rethink the foundations of epic-heroic immortality. Rather than focusing on a specific monster or monsters, the author identifies the “belly-monstrous” as a crucial point of intersection between mothers and warriors in traditional narratives of the Trojan War. Identifying the gestating/digesting belly as the center of the Iliadic world, this groundbreaking approach disrupts androcentric readings of the Iliadic warrior and his ethos, emphasizing the crucial role of female suffering in the generation and preservation of immortal legacy.
The author reconsiders ancient Greek depictions of the Trojan War and its aftermath, including Homeric epic and the tragedies of Aeschylus and Euripides, and illuminates the cohesive patterning of Shakespeare’s “mother-warrior” plays, which place inherited Iliadic-belly-monstrous motifs in conversation with cultural anxieties of late Elizabethan England.
With meticulous scholarship and captivating analysis, Maternity, Monstrosity, and Heroic (Im)mortality from Homer to Shakespeare redefines the relationship between mothers and warriors in the Iliadic-heroic ideal, paving the way for new interpretations of war, grief, and immortal glory in a broad range of literary and cultural contexts.
Author

Sara Burdorff

Sara Frances Burdorff is an independent scholar and associate of the UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies. She has a PhD in English from UCLA and an MPhil in Renaissance English from Cambridge University. In addition to Homer, Shakespeare, mothers, and monsters, her other research interests include Old English riddles and poetry. She has also appeared in public media as a myth and folklore expert on cryptids and other mysterious phenomena.