Beatrice Unbound: Adaptations of Shelley’s; The Cenci Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • ; This essay considers three twentieth-century re-imaginings of Shelley’s; The Cenci; : Artaud’s play; Les Cenci; , Bernold Goldschmidt’s opera; Beatrice Cenci; , with a libretto by Martin Esslin, and both the play and opera versions of; Beatrice Chancy; by George Elliot Clarke with music by James Rolfe. Shelley and his adaptors in thinking through the figure of Beatrice take up what Shelley sees as the struggle of “oppressor to the oppressed.” Shelley writing during the reactionary restoration after the Napoleonic Wars, Artaud writing between the World Wars, Goldschmidt composing as a refugee from the Nazis, and Clarke seeking to illuminate the practice of slavery within Canada, all explore both oppression’s devastating impact and the possibility of a resistance to tyranny. Artaud’s version, which places Count Cenci as father at its center, altered the reception of Shelley’s play, influencing later adaptations and even the way we read Shelley’s play itself. In the end, that Shelley offers the most radical and ultimately feminist vision of a way beyond the patriarchal society that ensnares all these various Beatrices.;

publication date

  • October 9, 2024

has restriction

  • closed

Date in CU Experts

  • January 20, 2025 1:16 AM

Full Author List

  • Cox JN

author count

  • 1

Other Profiles

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 2049-6699

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 2049-6702

Additional Document Info

start page

  • 171

end page

  • 185

volume

  • 31

issue

  • 2