Lady, Hero, Saint

The Digby Play's Mary Magdalene

By Joanne Findon
Series: Studies and Texts
Publisher: PIMS
Hardcover : 9780888441737, 240 pages, March 2011

Description

The late medieval Digby Mary Magdalene play is dominated by its female protagonist. The playwright seems deliberately to have crafted an especially complex version of the popular saint: a multivalent female figure who both challenges boundaries and presents an exemplar of active, virtuous womanhood. This study begins by examining the play's use of imagery common in lyric poetry. Phrases from Latin scripture, liturgy and hymns accentuate the depiction of a protagonist who represents a meshing of genres, conventions, languages and modes of signification. The play is also a fusion of romantic and spiritual adventure which deploys two major romance 'memes,' creating a figure who redefines the romance heroine as both Lady and Hero. In echoing the fabliaux and other comic intertexts, the play straddles generic boundaries to explore contemporary social issues. Finally, the play's use of space and stagecraft highlights Mary's ability to defy conventional gender boundaries. Since the Digby playwright demonstrates a broad knowledge of secular literature, this study situates his Mary Magdalene within the landscape of literary intertexts and contemporary concerns that might have shaped his thinking. It examines the ways in which the audience might have responded to a liminal figure who, marked by ambivalence and paradox, occupies the space between earth and heaven, ordinary time and eternity, sensuality and sanctity.

Reviews

The Digby Mary Magdalene has hitherto been studied primarily as it relates to East Anglian devotional culture. Joanne Findon deepens and broadens our understanding of the play by exploring its use of the 'secular' genres of romance, fabliau, and love lyric to develop its characters and themes. She further shows how it subverts generic conventions and how that subversion is echoed in its unconventional use of space. Findon thus illuminates both the play's ideology and its literary strategies while clarifying its place in literary history. Lady, Hero, Saint is a splendid contribution to the revisionary scholarship that is transforming our understanding of fifteenth-century English literature. - Karen Winstead, Ohio State University