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Chapter

“A Thing Like Death”: Shakespeare's Narcotic Theater

Tanya Pollard

in Drugs and Theater in Early Modern England

Published in print February 2005 | ISBN: 9780199270835
Published online September 2007 | e-ISBN: 9780191710322 | DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199270835.003.0003
“A Thing Like Death”: Shakespeare's Narcotic Theater

Preview

This chapter considers the juxtaposition of sleeping potions and poisons, and their parallels with the uneasy relationship between comedy and tragedy in two plays by Shakespeare. In Romeo and Juliet, the typically comic devices of the sleeping potion and the false death meet with fatal complications. Similarly, in Antony and Cleopatra, references to narcotically induced oblivion are identified with the seductive pleasures of Egypt and Cleopatra, yet ultimately lead to the lovers’ deaths rather than the happy ending of comedy. The chapter frames its readings of the plays around contemporary medical debates about narcotic drugs such as opium and mandragora. Looking at complaints from anti-theatrical tracts about the theater’s capacity to lull spectators into sleepy oblivion, it shows how the escapism of the theater was identified with the dangers of pleasurable narcotics.

Keywords: Romeo and Juliet; Antony and Cleopatra; comedy; tragedy; escapism; sleeping potion; opium; mandragora

Chapter.  10193 words. 

Subjects: literary studies (1500 to 1800)

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