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[연옥]: 예이츠가 도달한 곳 : Purgatory: Yeats's Terminus

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Authors

황동규

Issue Date
1999
Publisher
서울대학교 인문대학 인문학연구소
Citation
인문논총, Vol.42, pp. 105-116
Abstract
Yeats's chronologically penultimate play Purgatory in his posthumous Collected
Plays of W. B. Yeats is difficult to put into a pigeon-hole. It is neither a
traditional one like Cathleen ni Houlihan nor a No-type one like The Death of
Cuchulain. which ends the book.
In Last Poems and Two Plays, the last book W. B. Yeats was preparing to
publish just before his death, Purgatory occupies the last seat. The actual last
play The Death of Cuchulain precedes it. Considering Yeats's concerns in
reordering his works when he published books the place of the play betrays a
significance hard to overlook.
Purgatory is a rather simple play, the shortest among the published plays he
has ever written, with only two characters, an old man and his young son, on a
simple symbolic set. The old man is a 'Yeatsian' believer of Ire-living' or
'dreaming-back' after one dies a violent or passionate death. The old man kills his
son in order to eliminate the 're-living' process of his dead mother. But his
double murder (50 years ago he killed his father who violated the 'big house'
tradition) brings no deliverance from 're-living' for his dead mother because she
cannot get rid of her human 'lust.' Lust-life we find in Crazy Jane poems and
other last poems manifests itself at the end of the play. The last work in Yeats's
'last' book shows us eloquently that the final choice he reached is filthy life over
deliverance from life's filth.
ISSN
1598-3021
Language
Korean
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/29299
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