Air Bubble and the Horrid Image: The Representation of Fear and the Supernatural in Macbeth

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Date

2019

Authors

Ahmet Süner

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Netherlands rbk@louisiana.edu

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
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Abstract

This article examines the representations of the supernatural in Shakespeare’s Macbeth which served as a significant source for later horror literature. It shows that the play’s rhetoric of horror and of the supernatural depends on its shifting discourse of nature. Nature in Macbeth refers to an external nonhuman nature of cosmic events and elemental figures (air bubble and fire) as well as to an internal human nature of “horrid” images and surmises. Supernatural elements derive from the ontological instability in both external and internal nature and relate particularly to those actions or events through which nature becomes disturbed and duplicated. As the imaginary dagger scene indicates the most terrifying source of the supernatural in the play is the human-made image that duplicates nature internally. © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Horror, Image, Macbeth, Nature, Shakespeare, Supernatural, Macbeth, Shakespeare, IMAGE, Supernatural, Horror, Nature

Fields of Science

0602 languages and literature, 06 humanities and the arts, 0603 philosophy, ethics and religion

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OpenCitations Citation Count
1

Source

Neophilologus

Volume

103

Issue

4

Start Page

591

End Page

605
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Scopus : 1

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Mendeley Readers : 3

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