Abstract
이병은 Lee, Byung-Eun Foods and Class in Shakespeare’s
Plays Foods and Class in Shakespeare’s Plays 147
~ 168 Medieval and Early Modern English Studies Volume 25
No. 2 (2017)
Due to Elizabethans believing in hierarchy in all areas of life
and thought, the majority envisioned an hierarchy based on blood
quality. Certain writers of this period reflected such beliefs
through their interests in and demonstrated a certain knowledge of
blood and medicine. This knowledge was prompted by the influence
of Hippocratic and Galenic teaching, and was constantly being
scrutinized for harmony with Biblical teachings. This paper
insists that food was classified on the basis of eugenic
capability, inasmuch as diet in some measure determined the
quality of one’s blood, and blood regulates, to a certain extent,
characterization, plotting, and, in some cases, theme in
Shakespeare’s plays. Certain foods are categorized primarily by
Elizabethan doctors and writers, and separated into two classes,
“gentle” and “base”: wine, ale and beer, beef, mutton, pork, goat,
birds, chicken, fish, milk, white and brown bread, herbs, fruits,
and others. Beef, for example, was in the anomalous position of
being rejected as flesh of gentle by conservative medical theory,
while at the same time being eaten by all classes. Interestingly,
human milk was regarded as blood in another form.
This paper, then, applies this division of foods to Shakespeare’s
plays, for they are rich with examples of how foods were regarded
by the attitudes and beliefs of the Elizabethans: The Taming of
the Shrew, Titus Andronicus, Pericles, Prince of Tyre, and about
12 other plays. Jack Cade, in 2 Henry VI, for example, shouts that
when he is King of England, “I will make it felony to drink small
beer” and “of the city’s cost, the pissing conduit [shall] run
nothing but claret wine this first year of our reign.” He is
vowing to improve the health of his base followers as well as
contributing to their advancement in enjoying the higher range of
gustatory sensations, advancing them socially.
Keywords
Shakespeare, foods, class, gentle, base, blood, hierarchy