The Power of "Parity" in
Ford's'Tis Pity She's a Whore
Susannah B. Mintz, Skidmore College
Readers of 'Tis Pity She's a Whore have long agreed that the social milieu
of John Ford's tale of sibling incest is one of profound hypocrisy
and deceit. The play openly examines brother-sister incest (it is the first
English drama to do so) within the context of several intricate subplots
involving adultery, revenge, and murder, none of which the city's authorities
do anything to ameliorate-indeed, both the ineffectual Friar and
"opportunist" Cardinal manage to exacerbate Parma's difficulties. As
Verna Foster writes, the decorous veneer of Parmesan society masks a
propensity toward "illicit sex and the violence of revenge," so that incest
can be said to stem from the effort to achieve integrity of purpose in a
world in which "it is demonstrably impossible to live uncorrupted."
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