Milk, Blood and Gall: Witches’ Bodily Fluids from the Treatise to the English Stage

Authors

  • Elisabeth LACOMBE Université Picardie-Jules Verne, Centre d’Etudes des Relations et des Contacts Linguistiques et Littéraires (EA 4283), Amiens, France. elisabeth.lacombe@etud.u-picardie.fr https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6494-7103

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24193/subbdrama.2020.1.03

Keywords:

witch, melancholy, blood, milk, demonology, humoralism, plays, seventeenth-century.

Abstract

The relationship between humoralism and literature has been broached by many critics, often in the lovesickness or in the melancholic-as-genius aspect. Yet, barring a few individual cases, there has been no general study linking witches with humours in the seventeenth century English dramatical corpus. The present study attempts to fill this gap by identifying the medical or demonological treatises that influenced playwrights’ representations of witches. Witches bodies are better understood by taking into account Thomas Laqueur’s theory of the one-sex body, following the transformation of fluids into one another which is characteristic of their fundamental imbalance. Firstly, milk turns into gall inside witches-mothers rejecting their motherhood, then into blood inside witches feeding familiars in a distorted image of motherhood. The absence of blood in amenorrhoeic witches is shown as a reccurent cause for their melancholy which has physiological and psychological consequences, in particular a licentiousness that makes witches seek blood in its semen form. Black bile is thought to be the devil’s humour, yet in the Weyer-Bodin controversy theoreticians do not agree on whether witches are melancholic women suffering from hallucinations or real agents of the devil. On the other hand, plays ascribe either physical or emotional causes as well as symptomes coherent with a melancholy disease to witches, and playwrights use symbolical representations of melancholy on stage. In conclusion, it is difficult to establish a typology of such representations, given that each witch is uniquely composed with a particular playwright’s understanding of humoralism, often conflating several distinct ideas.

Author Biography

Elisabeth LACOMBE, Université Picardie-Jules Verne, Centre d’Etudes des Relations et des Contacts Linguistiques et Littéraires (EA 4283), Amiens, France. elisabeth.lacombe@etud.u-picardie.fr

Elisabeth Lacombe is a Ph.D. student in Comparative Literature (Université Picardie-Jules Verne / CERCLL EA 4283), with a part-time teaching position. She is also an associate Ph.D. student in the ALEA research network: as such, she studies astrology and divination representations as well as the way fate and providence are conceptualized through these practices in 17th century literature. Her current dissertation focuses on the intercultural representations of witchcraft in early modern European drama. She is also working on the circulation of ideas between literature and theoretical texts on magic such as demonological, philosophical or medical essays.

References

Primary sources. Treatises:

The most strange and admirable discoverie of the three witches of Warboys. London: Widow Orwin, 1593. Reprinted in Witchcraft in England, 1558-1618. Edited by Barbara Rosen, 239-297. Amhurst: University of Massachusetss Press, 1991.

Burton, Robert. The Anatomy of Melancholy. 6th edition, London: Hen. Crips & Lodo Lloyd, 1652 (1st ed 1621). Project Gutenberg, 2004. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10800.

De Loier, Peter. A treatise of specters. Translated by Zachary Jones. London: Val. S., 1605; Boston Public Library, 2016. https://archive.org/details/treatiseofspecte00loye.

Ferrand, James. Erotomania or a treatise discoursing of the Essence, Causes, Symptomes, Prognosticks, and Cure of Love or Erotique melancholy. Translated by Edmund Cilmead. Oxford: L. Lichfield, 1640; Ann Arbor: Text Creation Partnership, 2006. http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A00695.0001.001.

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James, Rex. Daemonologie In Forme of a Dialogie Diuided into three Bookes. London: Robert Waldegrave, 1597; Project Gutenberg, 2008. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25929.

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Scot, Reginald. A Discovery of Witchcraft. Edited by Brinsley Nicholson. London: Elliot Stock, 1886 (1st ed 1584). Princeton Theological Seminary Library, 2009. https://archive.org/details/discoverieofwitc00scot.

Primary sources. Plays:

Ford, John (and Thomas Dekker?), Perkin Warbeck. In John Ford ‘Tis a Pity she’s a whore and other plays, edited by Marion Lomax, 241-324. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.

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Toohey, Peter. Melancholy, Love and Time: Boundaries of the self. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2004.

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Published

2020-03-30

How to Cite

LACOMBE, E. (2020). Milk, Blood and Gall: Witches’ Bodily Fluids from the Treatise to the English Stage. Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Dramatica, 65(1), 69–90. https://doi.org/10.24193/subbdrama.2020.1.03

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