Viewed the play as a
radical critique of the
existing political order.
The court of Amalfi presents in
miniature the court of Whitehall.
Ignored the question of
tragic femininity.
R.S WHITE:
Argues the Renaissance belief that
literature was intended to teach and delight
should be taken seriously.
The play portrays distinct
moral and political
positions rather than
amorality.
Play = a series of moral
awakenings e.g. the
strangulation of the Duchess
through which Webster
condemns the destructive
manipulations of the society
around her.
ANDREA HENDERSON:
The play anticipates the tumultuous events
later in the century e.g. the closing of the
theatres 1642.
Duchess represents emergent
bourgeois values while her brothers
represent aristocratic values of
decadent self- display.
Duchess represents the private
sphere of family and the
non-discussed private sphere
of sexuality.
The play = product of ideological
transition - change from the world of
court to the family.
KATE AUGHTERSON:
Ending defeats and punishes the forces of
corruption, disorder and evil in the play
e.g. major characters die and acknowledge
the evil of their actions.
Webster's ending is
ambiguous. Leaves
the fate of Malfi in the
hands of a young boy,
representative of
rebirth and hope but
easily manipulated.