Since the groundbreaking work of Frances Yates, alchemy and Rosicrucian practices have provided Renaissance scholars with a fascinating mystical frame through which to view Renaissance ideas about magic and science, their comingling of mysterious and early scientific practices enhancing our perception of how the modern world struggled to construct scientific practices redolent with a supernatural aura. Yates’s early work on Shakespeare’s later plays demonstrated how he traversed the alchemical world and infused linguistically and philosophically alchemical beliefs into dramatic topoi to account for the themes of tragic deaths, separation, and redemptive reconciliation. This process echoes the restored community reflective of the rota alchemical, the alchemical wheel that turns from chaos to harmony. Martina Zamparo’s study follows on and expands on that approach with a focus on The Winter’s Tale. Her central thesis is that the alchemical tradition, which permeated both the Elizabethan and Jacobean court, informs both the play’s dramatic structure—beginning in the winter of Sicily and turning to the spring and summer of Bohemia—and its major characters, all of whom are incarnations of alchemical principles.
Hardin Aasand (Thu,) studied this question.
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