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Titus Andronicus (character)

Titus Andronicus is the main character in William Shakespeare's revenge tragedy of the same name, Titus Andronicus.[1] Titus is introduced as a Roman nobleman and revered general. Prior to the events of the play, he dedicated ten years of service in the war against the Goths, losing 21 sons in the conflict. In the opening act, Titus orders that the eldest son of Tamora, Queen of the Goths, be sacrificed according to Roman tradition in order to avenge his dead kin. He is also offered the emperorship, but he declines the honor and bestows it upon the late emperor's son, Saturninus. When Saturninus is denied the ability to pick his first choice of empress, Lavinia, he chooses to wed Tamora. Throughout the rest of the play, Titus and Tamora remain locked in a battle of brutal revenge. The play thus descends into moral chaos as characters perpetrate or find themselves victims of various egregious offenses, including rape, mutilation, and murder. [1]

Comparisons

It has been suggested that Andronicus comes from Andronikos I Komnenos, a 12th-century Byzantine emperor, who shared Titus' proclivity for shooting arrows with messages attached.[2] When Anthony Hopkins played a stylized version of the character in the 1999 film Titus, he described the character as a combination of King Lear, Barney and Hannibal Lecter.[3] Although Titus Andronicus is the main character, some productions have adapted the play to be seen through the character of his grandson, Young Lucius.[4]

Summary of role in play

The play begins with Titus returning home after many years at war with the Goths, bringing the remaining four of his twenty-five sons with him. Titus is selected by the people of Rome to be the new emperor, but refuses this offer due to his old age. In his place, he chooses the former emperor's eldest son, Saturninus. Through the ceremonial sacrifice of his most noble captive, Alarbus–the eldest son of Tamora, Queen of the Goths–Titus unknowingly sparks a vicious cycle of revenge. Throughout the play, Titus seeks revenge on Tamora for injustices against his family, while simultaneously being the target of Tamora's own quest for revenge.[1]

Titus murders five people during the play, including one of his sons, Mutius, and his daughter, Lavinia. Displaying strict adherence to Roman law, he murders Mutius for not complying with his order for Lavinia to marry the new emperor, Saturninus. The second act of filicide occurs at the end of the play when Titus murders Lavinia, so that she does not have to live with the shame of having been raped and mutilated by Tamora's sons, Chiron and Demetrius. In Titus' final act of revenge upon Tamora, he kills Chiron and Demetrius and uses their blood and bones as the ingredients of a pie: "Hark, villains, I will grind your bones to dust, / And with your blood and it I’ll make a paste, / And of the paste a coffin I will rear, / And make two pasties of your shameful heads" (5.2.186–189).[1] Titus serves this pie to Tamora before killing her. As is customary in a Shakespearean tragedy, Titus also dies in the end, killed by Saturninus. Saturninus is then killed by Titus' last remaining son, Lucius, bringing the cycle of revenge to an end.[1]

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Thematic interpretations and scholarship

Heroism

Brown University Professor Coppélia Kahn identified Titus's development throughout the play as one from "Roman hero" to "revenge hero" in her 1997 novel Roman Shakespeare: Warriors, Wounds, and Women, in which she examines the role of gender in various Shakespeare plays through a feminist lens.[5] In further scholarship, the presentation of heroism as a whole in the play has been explored through its inextricable link to violence in adherence to true Roman form.[6]

Interpretation of Khan's two hero labels has incited proposal of key distinctions between the facets of a "Roman hero" and "revenge hero."[6] Titus as a "Roman hero" is a renowned and venerated war veteran, and he embodies the Roman ideal to such a notable degree that he is offered the greatest honor a Roman can achieve: the emperorship. At the beginning of the play, he tends to prioritize service of his country as well as the enforcement law and tradition over the protection his family. Provided examples of this behavior include his sacrifice of many sons to the war effort and his murder of Mutius for disobeying his command. On the other hand, this reading highlights how Titus as a "revenge hero" does the opposite, prioritizing a pursuit of vengeance on behalf of his family in defiance of law and order, committing crimes against other Roman citizens and the state as a whole. However, this interpretation delineates his development with a caveat, as Titus is never truly able to escape the mold of Roman ideals, as he commits filicide once again at the end of the play in line with tradition and family order.[6]

Patriarchy

In Roman Shakespeare: Warriors, Wounds, and Women, Kahn highlights how Titus's revenge is motivated by the marring of his daughter's virtue rather than any offenses carried out against him directly.[5] She asserts that Titus only transforms into one of the principle actors of revenge in the play due to his sense of ownership over Lavinia's virtue, an ownership that embodies the values of traditional patriarchal structures. Furthermore, she addresses Shakespeare's characterization of Lavinia as an almost excessive paragon of patriarchal womanhood, literally robbed of her voice and compliant as a prop in her father's revenge schemes, but never enacting revenge on her own. Titus eventually makes the choice to kill Lavinia as a show of mercy, motivated by the urge to spare her of living with the shame of having been defiled in such a gruesome manner. In Kahn's reading, the action solidifies Titus's role as a manifestation of patriarchal values, where the state in which his daughter can and should be allowed to exist falls under his own jurisdiction.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Shakespeare, William (1995-03-16). Bate, Jonathan (ed.). Titus Andronicus: Third Series. Bloomsbury Publishing. doi:10.5040/9781408160121.00000031. ISBN 978-1-4081-6012-1.
  2. ^ Stoll, Elmer Edgar, ed. (1922). The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus, Volume 30. The MacMillan Company. p. xvi. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  3. ^ Holden, Stephen (December 24, 1999). "Titus (1999): Film Review; It's a Sort of Family Dinner, Your Majesty". The New York Times. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  4. ^ "Titus Andronicus". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved April 25, 2014.
  5. ^ a b c Kahn, Coppélia (1997). Roman Shakespeare: warriors, wounds, and women. Feminist readings of Shakespeare. London ; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-05450-8.
  6. ^ a b c Hancock, Brecken Rose (2004). "Roman or Revenger? The Definition and Distortion of Masculine Identity in Titus Andronicus". Early Modern Literary Studies. 10 (1): 25 – via Gale Literature Resource Center.