
« But why is all this music? » : jeu du texte et guerre des sexes dans The Beggar’s Opera
Author(s) -
Alexandra Poulain
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
lisa
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1762-6153
DOI - 10.4000/lisa.2954
Subject(s) - opera , art , comics , taste , meaning (existential) , literature , character (mathematics) , humanities , aesthetics , philosophy , psychology , geometry , mathematics , epistemology , neuroscience
The many images of bonds and confinement in The Beggar’s Opera are metaphorical prefigurations of death by hanging, which threatens every character in the play. The only way in which they can delay this inevitable outcome is by keeping bodies, money and meaning in movement, while fixity means immediate death. Female desire, however, is phobically represented as mortiferous desire, whose ultimate goal is to reintroduce bonds and knots—especially "the sacred knots of marriage." The two ends offer two opposite outcomes for the war between the sexes which structures the plot: while the female taste for fixity triumphs in the original "tragic" end, the male propension for play has the final word in the Player’s comic version