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사라 케인의 현대 주체와 트라우마 -"페드라의 사랑"을 중심으로-Sarah Kane’s Modern Subject and Trauma: Phaedra’s Love

Other Titles
Sarah Kane’s Modern Subject and Trauma: Phaedra’s Love
Authors
최은실
Issue Date
Jun-2010
Publisher
한국중앙영어영문학회
Keywords
Phaedra’s love; trauma; modern subject; violence; morality; salvation/ 페드라의 사랑; 트라우마; 현대 주체; 폭력; 도덕성; 구원
Citation
영어영문학연구, v.52, no.2, pp 343 - 368
Pages
26
Journal Title
영어영문학연구
Volume
52
Number
2
Start Page
343
End Page
368
URI
https://scholarworks.sookmyung.ac.kr/handle/2020.sw.sookmyung/54902
DOI
10.18853/jjell.2010.52.2.017
ISSN
1598-3293
Abstract
When Sarah Kane, a famous English playwright in the 1990s, staged Blasted, her stage of extreme violence amazed theatrical world. Audiences gave harsh comments on her play due to the extreme violence, such as rape, mutilation, and murder. However, her play aroused audiences’ emotional and intellectual reaction. The author made all her readers and audiences to ask themselves who they really were. In this paper, how the subject suffering from trauma becomes a whole self is indicated through Kane’s work. The protagonist of Phaedra’s Love, Hippolytus, suffers from trauma and always worries about matters related to existence, such as life and death. From the pathology perspective, trauma is caused by experience of combat, a natural disaster, and mental damage. Although a person having trauma does not want to confront traumatic events, unexpectedly, traumatic memories repeatedly invade consciousness. Consequently, trauma destroys the balance of consciousness and leads to the split of a whole self against their will. Hippolytus is one of the subjects polarized into body and soul. Hippolytus is a nihilist but his attitude toward life becomes changed through Phaedra’s death. Hippolytus considers Phaedra’s sacrifice ‘her present to me,’ owing to the fact that he gets an opportunity to be freed from his own torment. In other words, Phaedra’s death becomes paradoxically Hippolytus’ salvation. As he is eager for change and release through death, he willingly chooses a public execution by the rioting mob. He by himself experiences atrocious violence; that is, his penis is cut off and his bowels are torn out. When confronting the moment of his death, everything is suddenly connected and he can experience of becoming a whole self. Paradoxically, in order to experience the moment of becoming a whole, he has to die. His final words, “If there could have been more moments like this”, show that he recognizes the connection between the spiritual and physical. Kane’s subject is not the one defeated in his own fight. In Phaedra’s Love, even though Hippolytus destroys himself, he pursues honesty physically, morally, mentally, and spiritually. Kane’s subject does not give up oneself but longs for change and finally achieves a whole self. In a word, it is a modern subject that Kane has created in Phaedra’s Love.
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