Thursday, May 30, 2019
Criticism of Goldsmithââ¬â¢s, She Stoops to Conquer Essay -- She Stoops Co
Criticism of Goldsmiths, She Stoops to moderateIn reading T.G.A. Nelsons critical try out Stooping to Conquer in Goldsmith, Haywood and Wycherley I have to say I that I was pretty scared. Drawing Freud to anything can really be scary according to almost anyone though, for certain in early criticism of She Stoops to Conquer. As Bernard Harris says, we should not discount unconscious forces in any comedy, but then he immediately drops the subject matter saying that Goldsmiths main interest lies elsewhere.(325) The main focus of Nelsons essay seemed to be on the difficulty that certain men seemed to find in achieving a all right sexual relationship with a woman resembling the mother. (319) This essay will look at what Nelson has to say about this Freudian ideology and bring to light my comments on the subject. Nelson begins by looking into some of Freuds essays and applying them to the characteristics describing the Restoration rake. (320) One example is how there is compulsive rep etition in his relationships. Passionate attachments are formed over again and again creating a long line of lovers. The preference for married women is also there, where another man claim the right of possession of her and yet the rake prefers her to one who is disengaged. winning Goldsmiths play, Nelson uses it as the clearest example of Freuds theory. In his play, the character Mar kickoff is very forthright in his dealings with those in a lower station, but with women of quality he becomes jump. Evidently, women of low social standing fail to qualify as modest women for him and this fits closely into Freuds description of the sufferer of selective impotence. (322) Reading further its found that the reason Marlow is so shy with those of hi... ... such an approach to a comedy traditionally, if tacitly, regarded as bland, inoffensive, and largely devoid of sexual content.(326) I applaud Nelson for the work and research he put into his essay and Im not saying that just because a play is a comedy, it cant have underlying feelings of repression or other factors involved in its creation. Its just on ecumenic principal then, having read Goldsmiths play and enjoyed it for itself while noting possibilities for his commenting on social/class order or the differences between city and country life, that I set deflection Nelsons criticism of the play and leave it as it stands, untouched by Freudian ideology. Works CitedGoldsrnith, Oliver. She Stoops to Conquer. Dover Publications, NY 1991 Nelson, T.G.A. Stooping to Conquer in Goldsmith. Haywood. and Wycherley. Essays in Criticism. Oxford University Press.
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