Gray, Sophie
Conjurer laureates: reading early modern magicians with Derrida.
Doctor of Philosophy thesis, University of Liverpool.
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Abstract
This thesis uses the philosophy of Jacques Derrida to propose a performative method of close reading, which it uses to explore the relationship between language and identity in early modern literary representations of magicians. It addresses the common assumptions we make about the authority and stability of language by exploring the tensions that arise as the magicians attempt to use performative language to realise impossible ambitions of absolute power, knowledge and self presence. The texts studied are a combination of prose and drama from 1512 to 1607. They are read in light of Derrida’s engagement with speech act theory in ‘Signature Event Context’ and ‘Limited Inc a b c . . .’ , and also other related work of his on the performative foundations of literature and the law, including ‘Before the Law’, ‘The Law of Genre’, and ‘Force of Law: The ‘Mystical Foundations’ of Authority’. The final chapter also takes in Aporias. The magicians’ trajectories are followed in three chapters. The first is on the founding violences of their authoritative identities. Working with Derrida’s accounts of the law, it begins by describing how the foundation of authority is self-authorizing and therefore performative. It then explores how performative pacts, deals and contracts with the devil are used to establish and authorize the magicians and their supernatural worlds. This metatextual authority is reflected in the magician’s own ambitions for the certainty and stability of absolute power and knowledge. Using the early modern sense of ‘perform’ as to complete, carry out or make something, the second chapter focuses upon materiality and embodiment as attempts to stabilise or fix performative utterances. Fake suicide notes and contracts written in blood are analysed to demonstrate the slip and drift equally at work in the structures of writing and signatures. In addition, Friar Bacon’s enormous brass head with its promise of ‘sound aphorisms’ is discussed as an alternative example of the misinformed urge to embody certainty. The final chapter addresses why almost all the stories of magicians, good and bad, end with their deaths. Following Derrida’s Aporias, death is represented as the ultimate opening limit, which undermines all attempts at certainty and self-presence. This leads to discussion of the other’s role in identity and, it follows, death. The magicians’ ends are compared, with particular focus on the sense of a coming event in the final scene of Doctor Faustus. The use of Derrida’s work to engage with early modern texts responds to a significant gap in the field. It offers original, contemporary insight into traditional themes of power, language and identity that are usually approached from a historicist perspective. The critical-creative close reading describes and carries out by the thesis suggests an exciting way to performatively respond to literature of the past, bearing witness to it but also transforming it into something new.
Item Type: | Thesis (Doctor of Philosophy) |
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Additional Information: | Date: 2013-09 (completed) |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Jacques Derrida, Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, Robert Greene, Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, English Faust Book, Merry Devil of Edmonton, Virgilius, Barnabe Barnes, The Devil's Charter, signatures, contracts, writing, idealization, deat, aporias, deconstruction, devils, early modern drama, literary theory, early modern pros, close reading, renaissance literature, seventeenth century, sixteenth century, magicians, magic, conjuring, conjurers, blood, iteration |
Subjects: | ?? PE ?? |
Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Engineering > School of Engineering |
Depositing User: | Symplectic Admin |
Date Deposited: | 27 Aug 2014 08:52 |
Last Modified: | 16 Dec 2022 04:42 |
DOI: | 10.17638/00018193 |
Supervisors: |
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URI: | https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/18193 |