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Waugh s Green World Reconceptualising The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold as a Transcoded Production of King Lear.pdf (1.92 MB)

Waugh’s green world: reconceptualising The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold as a transcoded production of King Lear

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posted on 2023-05-11, 10:52 authored by Barbara CookeBarbara Cooke

This article makes the case for interpreting Evelyn Waugh’s The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold (1957) as a transcoded performance of King Lear, directed and enacted through the hallucinations of the eponymous writer-protagonist. Suffering from writers’ block and bromide poisoning, Pinfold unconsciously re-creates and inhabits the roles of the king, his fool and Cordelia within a green world setting suggested own disordered mind. This exegesis of Waugh’s intricate method of textual adaptation, which encompasses numerous additional hypotexts from The Tempest to Waugh’s own contemporaries, urges Pinfold’s recognition as an exemplar of criticism-through-practice that may be applied across a wide spectrum of symbiotic creative relationships. Reconceptualising Pinfold in this way affords a new understanding of the later text’s notoriously baffling conclusion, which in turn generates a new lens through which to view King Lear. Throughout his ordeal, the embattled Pinfold demonstrates his commitment to the inseparable qualities of modesty and truthfulness that define Cordelia’s character. By ultimately handing Pinfold-as-Cordelia the victory Shakespeare denied her, Waugh announces both his adaptation and adapted text as meditations on the nature of, and need for, personal integrity and the right to emotional privacy.

Funding

The Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh

Arts and Humanities Research Council

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History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Department

  • English

Published in

Shakespeare

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Taylor & Francis under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Acceptance date

2023-03-24

Publication date

2023-04-25

Copyright date

2023

ISSN

1745-0918

eISSN

1745-0926

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Barbara Cooke. Deposit date: 27 March 2023

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