Output list
Journal article
Published 01/02/2023
First things (New York, N.Y.), 330, 9
Journal article
Published 01/01/2019
Religions (Basel, Switzerland ), 10, 1, 38
In The Rape of Lucrece and Hamlet, Shakespeare focuses upon the effects of sin and the problems of conscience that it causes. However, he does so by shifting focus from the sinner to the one harmed by the sin. Through this shift in focus, Shakespeare explores sin as something that does not only harm the sinner and his immediate victim, but as something that strikes against the common good. Sin harms humanity in its corporate nature, and the consequences of sinsorrows, guilt, conflicted conscience, and the desire for absolutionspread from the sinner to his victims and the larger community. At pivotal moments in both works, Shakespeare turns to artistic representations of the figure of Hecuba, sorrowing in the midst of the destruction of Troy, as a means for navigating the strained point of intersection between private conscience and the common good.
Journal article
Private Conscience, Public Reform, and Disguised Rule in The Malcontent and Measure for Measure
Published 05/2014
The Ben Jonson journal, 21, 1, 73 - 91