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THE DUCHESS OF MALFI Article Review

Summary rating: 5 stars 3 Ratings
Author : JOHN WEBSTER
Review by : tammanna
Visits : 508  words: 900   Published: June 15, 2006
Renaissance England was a period of flowering of English

literature. Webster is a well-known author of Jacobean

England; a period that saw the latter stages of
Jacobean

England. Jacobean age was an age of despair. It was
marked

by pessimism and negativity. The reason for such

overwhelming pessimism was the growing corruption in
court,

religious institutions and society. The court was full
of

sycophants and flatterers who misguided the king,
priests

and other clergymen in churches had become corrupt and

ordinary masses had no hope from the system. The
literature

of this period also reflects the same kind of attitude.
In

The Duchess of Malfi, Webster demystifies and exposes
the

corruption of state and church and also tackles the
issue

of patriarchal subordination of women. The play begins
with

Antonio commenting on the French court, which is upheld
as

the ideal court. He says that the French emperor has
rid

the court of unscrupulous courtiers and has a
parliament to

advise him. Such a description is in direct contrast to
the

court in the play and also the actual court of king
James I

in England. Ferdinand is a ruler who revels in
sycophancy.

It is amply revealed in the scene where he tells his

courtiers to laugh only when he laughs. Through
Ferdinand,

Webster critiques political absolutism. He represents
civic

authority, but he does not exercise his powers using
just

means, rather underhanded trickery. He imprisons the

duchess and tortures her in a brutal manner. The
duchess is

innocent and yet she is punished only because Ferdinand
and

the cardinal hold her to be guilty. This exposes the

tyrannical nature of the two brothers. Through
Ferdinand,

Webster reveals and indicts the corruption and
injustice of

the civic authority in England. Webster also critiques

institutionalized religion in the play. Through the

cardinal, Webster shows the duplicity and evil nature
of

catholic priests. He uses devious plots to bring down
his

enemies, indulges in adulterous sexual relationships
and

wants to bribe his way to become the Pope. He mocks

religion when he blasphemously uses the Holy Bible as a

weapon to kill Julia. Beneath the veneer of
religiosity, he

scoffs at it. He confiscates the land of the duchess by

unjust means. The Pope too is mentioned in the play,
and he

is also shown to be a corrupt religious leader. He has
an

army of his own, confiscates the duchess’s property at
the

behest of the cardinal and is implicated in various
other

wrong deeds. One of the reasons for depicting him in
such a

poor light is that England’s official religion at this
time

was protestant and the Catholics were viewed with
distrust

and was considered potentially traitorous. Hence we
have

stereotypical portrayals of the Catholics in the play.

Webster’s demystification of the state power echoes the

ideas presented in the book the prince by Machiavelli.
He

said that power can be acquired by anybody who knows
hoe to

hatch devious plots. According to him, power was not

something god-given, but acquired by those who can
practice

deception, can conceal vices with a virtuous façade.
This

explanation of politics was considered shocking by the

English as the Stuarts asserted the divine rights of
the

kings. So, Machiavelli was seen as a diabolical figure
in

England and Jacobean drama acquired a stock character—
the

Machivellian politician, of which the Cardinal and

Ferdinand are two examples. Webster also reveals the
tragic

subordination of women to patriarchy. The duchess
defies

her brothers by marrying again. She asserts her sexual

autonomy, transgresses against patriarchal authority
that

instigates her tragedy. Webster has been appropriated
by

both feminists, who see him as a proto-feminist, and
also

by andocentric critics who say he upholds the
traditional

patriarchal control of women and their sexuality.
Bosola

also reveals the state power and its corruption. He is
the

malcontent who does not get due recognition for his
deeds.

Therefore, he feels frustrated and hence becomes
embittered

and resentful. Bosola is a harsh critic of the court.
He

exposes its corruption and how only flatterers can
survive

in it. Therefore, it is substantially established that

Webster exposes the shortcomings of the state and

institutional religion, which proves to be detrimental
for

everyone.

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