AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

"Veniance, Lord, apon thaym fall": maternal mourning, divine justice, and tragedy in the Corpus Christi plays.

Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England

| January 01, 2006 | Goodland, Katharine | COPYRIGHT 2006 Associated University Presses. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

SCHOLARS have long recognized that medieval concepts of reciprocal justice and divine retribution underpin the dramatic patterns of the Herod plays. (1) However, they have overlooked the evidence suggesting that this ethical design is embodied in the mothers' laments. There is also critical disagreement over the strength of the typological association between the mothers of the Slaughter plays and the Virgin Mary of the Flight, Purification, and Passion sequences. While scholars agree that the plays skillfully blend topical realism with the biblical story in portraying Herod and his knights, (2) they vary in their assessments of the mourning mothers.

There is critical disagreement over whether or not the mothers of the Herod plays are "active" or "passive" in their suffering. This issue leads directly to the problem of typology: those who see the mothers as "active" often construe the Virgin as "passive." These critical discrepancies expose tacit biases with respect to the dramatic representation of female grief, particularly the Virgin's. There appears to be an expectation that female sorrow, and especially the Virgin's, should be dramatized as restrained, picturesque, and lyrical rather than angry and vengeful. None have pursued the parallels between Mary and the mothers beyond pointing out how their association supports the typology between Christ and the Innocents, a relationship that has been thoroughly charted. (3) The evidence of the plays suggests, however, that the affinity between Mary and the mothers is meaningful in its own right.

In this essay I hope to redress this critical oversight by demonstrating the significance of the typology between the Virgin of the Flight, Purification, and Passion sequences and the mothers of the Slaughter plays. In all four cycles Mary's narrow escape with her child prefigures the plight of the mothers, just as their dilemma, in turn, foreshadows Mary's woe during the Passion. The Purification play adds the last thematic thread to the dramatic tapestry that intertwines the fates of Mary and the mothers. It underscores the tragic kinship between them by auguring both the mothers' loss of their children and Mary's inevitable loss of Jesus.

The maternal mourning of the holy women in medieval drama, as Peter Dronke shows, is rooted in the wails of anguish and songs of sorrow through which medieval women coped with the death of their loved ones throughout their own lives. (4) In these plays, the mourning Mother of God is not a mute emblem of sorrow; her dramatic power emanates from her wails, not her silence. Her laments condemn Herod, while the cries of the bereaved mothers compound her denunciation and engender his fate. Moreover, this dramatic typology conveys not simply Christ's tragic burden, but also his mother's.

To make this argument, I first examine critical resistence to reading the dramatic agency of maternal mourning in these plays. Next, I analyze writings by John Mirk, the popular late medieval English preacher, to illuminate medieval beliefs about the power of cursing and maternal mourning. After establishing this critical and historical background, I turn to a close reading of the plays in order to demonstrate the dramatic agency of maternal mourning in the medieval English Corpus Christi drama.

I

In their discussions of the Towneley Slaughter of the Innocents both David Bevington and J. W. Robinson raise the issue of typology between the Virgin of the Passion and the mothers of the Herod plays, but they reach different conclusions. Bevington begins by noting a correspondence between the mourning mothers of the Towneley Herod the Great and the lamenting Virgin of the Towneley Crucifixion. However, his observation remains inconclusive because he sees the Virgin's lament as passive and the mothers of the Herod play as active. Observing that the "the mothers of the slain children are ... vividly portrayed" in the Wakefield play, he concludes: "Although their role is similar to that of the Virgin Mary at the foot of the cross, they are not passive mourners but fiercely protective women justly accusing their oppressors of unmanliness." (5) While J. W. Robinson agrees that "each woman in turn puts up a defense" against the knights, he has no doubt that the terms of their laments are meant to "recall Mary's lamentation at the Crucifixion, thus making clear, by implication that their sons have been killed for Christ" (167). While Robinson sees the typology between Mary and the mothers, he interprets its significance only in terms of Christ.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Katharine Goodland. Female Mourning and Tragedy in Medieval and Renaissance...
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama Jacobs, Kathryn March 22, 2007 700+ words
...such condemnation appears in the pageants of chapter 2, "Maternal Mourning and Tragedy in the Nativity and Passion Plays," largely...Goodland elaborately compares the parallels between the mothers of the slaughtered Innocents and the distressed Mary of the...
Women, Death and Literature in Post-Reformation England.(Reviews)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly Kinney, Clare R. June 22, 2004 700+ words
...But she is perhaps most interested in the semiotics of maternal mourning, and offers a rich survey of its manifestations and cultural...expanding the limits of permitted self-inscription as mourning mother--in one instance monumentally converting "grief into...
Women, Death and Literature in Post-Reformation England.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of History Hickerson, Megan L. December 1, 2004 700+ words
...Shakespeare's Heno, VIII--while ideas about immoderate maternal mourning informed other Tudor and Stuart literary polemic, as in...both powerful matriarch and virtuous, grieving wife and mother. Phillippy illuminates the complexity of interacting forces...
Mother's Day, Father's Day: modern and .... (gifts)
Magazine article from: Party & Paper Retailer Ward, Lyla February 1, 1991 700+ words
Mother's Day, Father's Day: Modern and ... Stay-at-home mothers or working mothers ... divorced mothers or mother substitutes, chances are when May 12 rolls around at least 80% of the adult female population...
Mothers progressed through a 4 phase process to resume their own lives after...
Magazine article from: Evidence-Based Nursing CT., Beck January 1, 2003 700+ words
...and multiparas as well as mothers of twins conceived spontaneously...theory on other samples of mothers of twins to ensure that...the theory to individual mothers, identifying the specific phase of the process each mother is working through at a...
Mothers of infants in neonatal nurseries had challenges in establishing...
Magazine article from: Evidence-Based Nursing D., Lupton J., Fenwick July 1, 2002 700+ words
...The enforced separation made first time mothers feel they were "not being a mother". Mothers felt supervised by the nursery staff...firm views on the qualities of a good mother. Nurses felt mothers should put their infants first, show...
Mother's Day impact: Restaurants handle busy day in interesting ways.
Newspaper article from: San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio, TX) May 7, 2005 700+ words
...handed out and gifts bought to celebrate Mother's Day tomorrow. And as moms enjoy their special day, so will local restaurants. Mother's Day is one of their busiest days of...percent of Americans will celebrate this Mother's Day by dining out, compared with...
Mother tongues and literary languages.
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review Lepschy, Giulio October 1, 2001 700+ words
...signs'. For the expression 'mother tongue' in sense 1 (native...language), the OED comments: 'mother was originally the uninflected...points to attestations with mothers (1540, 1617). In the entry for 'mother' there are also other combinations...
A mother in today's world.
News wire article from: UNB - United News of Bangladesh April 27, 2007 700+ words
...to fulfill her role as a mother, The primary picture of a mother is her love. A mothers love can move the mountains...saying, Love conquers all. Mothers are embodiments of love...the contributions of the mother. Added to the role of...
Mother Boards provide guidance to churches.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service Gray, Helen T. May 15, 2002 700+ words
...Rock, Ark., also remembers the mothers getting folks ready to worship. "A mother would start singing a hymn to kind...young woman, she would help her mother and mother-in-law, both church mothers, bake the communion bread. These...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, "Veniance, Lord, apon thaym fall": maternal mourning, divine justice,...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA