“Noble patricians, patrons of my right, defend the justice of my cause with arms” (I.i.1-2).
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“Noble patricians, patrons of my right, defend the justice of my cause with arms” (I.i.1-2).
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It‘s not that I enjoyed this so much or how it works with the jammed together mixture of gore/shock gamed with concerns of calculation vs mistakes, it‘s what it says about art in relation to our finicky sense of what‘s ok. This macabre can do the magic, can work. We can laugh at it, our fascination thoroughly dominating over our sense of need for decency. But have to wonder about our programming.
Thank you #shakespearereadalong
Mad, bad, & dangerous. It's probably wrong to say I enjoyed a play this spattered in blood, what with the rape, mutilation, & murders that take place, not to mention the racism, xenophobia, & misogyny that underlie all of it. Yet I did. A revenge tragedy that maybe plays with the tropes & excesses of the genre. Dark humour. The hypocrisies of law & honour in Roman society still live on in modern toxic ideas of patriarchy, property, & nationhood.
This has lots of dark stuff - violent deaths, rape, mutilation, cannibalism, honour killing. Loads of violence as the characters were caught in a bloody cycle of revenge. It‘s crazy how much blood is spilled yet fascinating to read on. One character seems conveniently cast as the villain, but the play was ‘entertaining‘ to the edge of grotesque comedy. Always interesting & helpful to read along & discuss with the #shakespearereadalong group.
Titus Act V
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Bodies, pies, killing the rape victim for honor (!), anthropomorphic ideas meant to be taken as true (or an elaborate offer of hostages?), and a moor giving line to racism assumptions. What could TS Eliot have meant? Did he just lack a sense of humor? Also, was Aaron a hero, saving his baby? Also a 100 other questions, concerns, etc. What did you make of this feast and play? “Come, come, be everyone officious”
Visual representation of the body count throughout the play.
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This was supposed to be the goriest Shakespeare play. The gore grows very slowly until the death toll skyrockets in the final act. Fun is had by all (who read it, not the characters). This play a certainly an exploration of the reader‘s darker side.
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I‘ve included the final body count, and a lovey visual of the action of the play.
I finished the final act tonight, and the death count went up appropriately for a tragedy. I wasn‘t surprised by much in this act except one murder by Titus and felt most of the payback was earned. I enjoyed this play much more than I expected, although again the reading together and discussing always helps.
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Act 5: Lucius raised an army of Goths, who were recently defeated by Rome, to topple Rome's emperor. Although their former queen was empress of Rome, they never much liked her anyway and are eager to get revenge on her and Rome. No battle needed as their targets were murdered at parley. I am sure everything will be fine--surely those Goths will happily march home with no pillaging or booty. Gratitude is payment enough for them. 🤔🤣
🎉🥳🎉THE DEATH TOLL RISES!!!🎉🥳🎉
🔪⚔️🗡🔪🔪🥧🍴⚔️⚔️
A good time was had by all...well, most...okay, not many of the characters, but I share enjoyed it. The one character I felt should have ended up the only one alive, sadly, died, but what can you do? It‘s a tragedy after all.
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@TheBookHippie
I totally forgot that Titus bakes Tamora‘s sons into a pie and makes her eat it. That‘s right. The pie!!! 🤣😂🤣
🔪🔪🥧
Titus Andronicus Act V - Sunday
Bon Appétit!
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Act 4: Aaron holds a cute little bundle of his genes, and although he is a casual and pitiless murderer, he won't let anyone harm said little bundle. Good on Shakespeare for understanding some evolutionary psychology four centuries before it was developed. 🤣
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What a crazy web we weave when we plot revenge! This play was a mix of unspeakable violence & an almost Monty Pythons take on death & dismemberment, and I could not stop reading. I will admit, I was a bit disappointed by the final resolution, and the stereotypical bad guy (uh racism, alive & well since before Shakespeare), but if you liked the often bloody twists & turns of fortune in Game of Thrones, you‘ll probably enjoy this play.
I listened to Act IV with breakfast and appreciated it more than Act III. Apparently Aaron‘s only sympathy is for blood relatives and Lavinia finally gets a chance to share what she knows. It seems this is still quite a bit of build up and there is a lot to happen in the final act.
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Titus Act IV
And again, just for a moment Aaron flickers a conscience, then does in a nurse and condemns a midwife. Strange bloodline morality. Also, Lavinia writes of her rapists, Titus shoots at the stars, and sends a few messages to the emperor‘s house. Also Ovid plays a prominent role and a few choice lines sneak in there. Where are we going next? Thoughts?
A little disappointed in the still rather small body count. I thought this book was supposed to be so bloody. The only truly bloody bit was poor Lavinia (who did manage to name her killers in act IV).
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@Graywacke
I made the mistake of starting Indian Killer while reading Titus. More butchery of humans than I am accustomed to reading about in one week! I had seriously forgotten what Indian Killer was about--it was just next on the shelf after I finished Song of Solomon. Good thing I have Pride and Prejudice with #pemberlittens to cheer me up!
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🤣😂🤣
For @Graywacke who seems to have a twisted sense of humour similar to my own. 😏😏😏
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“Bear thou my hand, sweet wench, between thy teeth”
Titus Act 3 #shakespearereadalong
There is gore, macabre and then there this act. Titus pleads to rocks for his sons‘ lives. When Aaron requests a 🖐 as ransom, there is a fight over who gets to offer one. (It‘s cut off on stage.) And when the 🖐 comes back with 👦🏻x2, Titus sets up a march displaying the bloody body parts. It‘s too much for Titus. For you too? Where are we? melodrama? Humor?
With revenge becoming a major theme in the play from here on out, especially for Titus, I have a feeling the body count is really going to jump next week.
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I listened to Act III tonight because I don‘t think I will have enough time in the morning. I thought this was an especially interesting simile, but I wasn‘t necessarily impressed by the rest of the act. Just wondering why anyone in this play trusts anyone else about anything at this point. 🤷♀️ 🗡 Looking forward to tomorrow‘s discussion to see others‘ thoughts.
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He‘s lost the plot. (Act III)
I‘m getting why this work is deemed “too much” - but it‘s for that reason that it endears me. It‘s cartoony and outlandish rather than a trademark tragedy but 🤷🏻♀️
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It‘s a dangerous world out there. Wash your hands often and watch out where you put them (or your heads).
Titus Act 3, Sunday #shakespearereadalong
Trigger Warnings ahead.
Whooooo buddy Act II was 80‘s slasher movie gory. But surprisingly, Tamora‘s fiends fighting over getting to r*pe Lavinia turned my stomach more than anything else. I both recommend the live cast audiobook and say reader beware. Nothing skeeves me more than r*pe bc it‘s pure power possession.
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Finished Act 2. Why was the brother of the emperor walking around with no sword or guards in light of recent events? Why were Quintus and Martius so trusting of Aaron?! Also, it is interesting how Lavinia joins Bassanius in degrading Tamora as a cuckolder (even though she is; it seems to show some bitterness about who ended up being emperor).
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Image is from a bloodless Japanese performance. It‘s all ribbons.
Titus Act II
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Aaron‘s mechanisms lead to a murder, premeditated rape/torture and probably the executions of 2 more. Titus has 1 child left before realizing there was a threat. Presenting disfigured Lavinia on the stage seems to have been a step beyond what was considered normal. And the bard is nodding to Ovid and using humor. Could you stomach it? Thoughts?
The death count in Act II might not have been high, but it was incredibly violent. Some scenes had me cringing as I listened. As always I appreciate the full cast production of the ArkAngel audio.
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Wow, this was one nasty act. The death toll rises, but not as much as I expected after the first act. I‘m sure the list will grown quickly enough, though.
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I just finished Act 1, and about all I can say is, in the immortal words of Ron Burgandy, "That escalated quickly." Also, wow, this is a very early work!
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Just a reminder we‘ll continue to discuss the beauty of Shakespeare this Sunday - Titus Act 2
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It‘s better to be the Emperor than not.
I was surprised that I really enjoyed this act. ☺️ Titus graciously exchanges being emperor to being the grandfather of an emperor. Alas, power is unforgiving. In quick succession Lavinia is taken, Titus kills his own son, and finds his captured enemy his queen with deeply held revenge on her mind. Hmm. Dark stuff ahead. (Anyone else thinking King Lear?) What did you think of Act I?
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Act I scene I
Aha! The cover makes sense now. 😳
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I‘m learning there is a wide cultural lineage from this play, including a 1999 movie with Anthony Hopkins. And I thought it was obscure. Gore leaves echoes 😳
More on its influence here (the article has spoilers) : https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/04/theater/titus-andronicus.html
See you all Sunday, when we‘ll talk about Act I and the early body count. #shakespearereadalong
#shakespearereadalong , next is Titus Andronicus, the play T. S. Eliot called, “one of the stupidest and most uninspired plays ever written”. What are we getting into? Completists, resilient ones and gleeful critics welcome. ?? 🙂
Pictured is the only existent contemporary sketch of a Shakespeare play, and it‘s from this one.
Discussion dates:
Act I - July 19
Act II - July 26
Act III - Aug 2
Act IV - Aug 9
Act V - Aug 16
This was one of the “noisiest” plays in my head as I was reading it! I imagined the stamping of Roman Centurions‘ feet, the forceful oratory, the insidious hiss of traitorous asides, the gut wrenching grief of those who suffered... But I also heard snippets if Wagnerian opera, Beethoven‘s 9th, and even Merry Clayton belting out that famous Rape/Murder refrain from the Stones‘ song, “Gimme Shelter”!
#Shakespeare2020Project
I am ridiculously behind the #Shakespeare2020Project to the point where I can‘t realistically expect to catch up. This is where I left off and where I‘m picking back up; but from here on out, I think I‘ll just try to complete the Tragedies this year.
Bloodthirsty Goths and Ancient Romans, betrayals and revenge... It‘s like Quentin Tarantino wrote an opera! 🎭
I put off reading this for years then got a lot more out of it than I expected. I‘d heard a lot about it being Shakespeare‘s goriest play and it certainly is immensely violent, I never usually like violent writing but I felt like I understood more through the violence than I could have if it wasn‘t there. While Lavinia‘s story is deeply disturbing, I‘ve become a bit obsessed with her and her symbolism and how she‘s staged.
I‘m off to see Titus Buffonius tonight. A “hilarious and unforgettable adaptation of Shakespeare‘s Titus Andronicus.
Warning: Clowns at work! Grotesque story-telling and many, many bloody body parts used for parody. Not for the faint of heart.”
I‘m looking forward to it.
Not really a review, just a quick thought. I used to think Macbeth was brutal and violent but now I know that Titus Andronicus is just one big book if violence.
This is essentially Shakespeare before he became Shakespeare. Perhaps he chose to write this one is the previously established style of violent plots. He only later started to write in his own style that provided entertainment for the next 400 or so years.
I had a great time reading this play. If you ever wondered what it would be like if Shakespeare wrote a trashy slasher movie script, you do not need to wonder anymore because the script exists, and it is Titus Andronicus. Warning that pretty much every kind of assault is depicted in this, and it‘s not sensitively portrayed or anything, and you can throw in some racism too.
Still sad @Lindy and I didn‘t get to see the puppet performance.
Our Saskatoon Litsy outing was derailed because the performance was cancelled. 38C (100.4F) is apparently too hot for Shakespeare in a tent. @twohectobooks and I found a shady park bench by the South Saskatchewan river and talked about bookish things instead.