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Article
"Appalling tabernacle of self and unbelief": Wyndham Lewis's enemy of the stars
Closet Drama: History, Theory, Form
  • Allan C Pero, The University of Western Ontario
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-13-2018
URL with Digital Object Identifier
10.4324/9781315107394
Abstract

Lewis’s closet drama Enemy of the Stars does not do away with the actor – in its clash of mimetic and diegetic elements, it stages the agony of “performing” or “becoming” humanity itself. Its main characters, Arghol and Hanp, function as embodied verbs; in their agonistic struggle, stand metonymically for the agency missing from language. The blurring of the Vorticist manifesto with drama makes the play unique in the history of closet drama; it dramatizes Lewis’s critique of the master–slave dialectic by placing the master’s masochistic relationship to language in clashing juxtaposition to the slave’s resistance to unconscious agency and freedom.

Notes

https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/closet-drama-catherine-burroughs/e/10.4324/9781315107394

Burroughs, C. (Ed.). (2018). Closet Drama: History, Theory, Form (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315107394

Citation Information
Allan C Pero. ""Appalling tabernacle of self and unbelief": Wyndham Lewis's enemy of the stars" Closet Drama: History, Theory, Form (2018) p. 83 - 94
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/allan-pero/11/