Marked by Violence: Bodily Autonomy and Sexual Politics in Titus Andronicus, Written on the Body and Parable of the Sower
- Emily Caris-Harris
- Aug 27
- 1 min read
Author Bio:
Emily Caris-Harris is a fourth-year English Literature and History student at the University of Edinburgh. Throughout her studies, she has been consistently drawn to representations of violence, madness and sexuality, exploring these themes in a range of subject matters - from late medieval poetry to Shakespeare to the modern American novel. Their effect on the body and intersection with identity and self-image informs her dissertation, which focuses on the work of Samuel Beckett.
Essay Abstract:
This essay examines the intersection between violence and sexuality in William Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, Jeanette Winterson's Written on the Body and Octavia E. Butler's Parable of the Sower, interrogating the implications it has for women's bodily autonomy across temporal and literary boundaries. It argues the two are intrinsically linked and both romantic and non-romantic relationships are shaped by domination and violation. It underlines the consistent objectifcation and dehumanisation of women's bodies and identities through examining themes such as cannibalism, lust-driven relationships and the treatment of victims of sexual violence. This essay ultimately contends that an examination of Titus Andronicus and Parable of the Sower alongside Written on the Body forces a reader to confront the pervasive and systematic romanticisation of violence within sex, normalised due to the familiarity of Written on the Body's setting.
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