Hungarian academic explores Blake’s response to 18th-century rape trials

Noémi Pintér examines how Visions of the Daughters of Albion can be seen as a response to the shaming of women in rape trials during Blake's lifetime

The latest issue of The AnaChronisT includes an article by Noémi Pintér, '"Theotormon hears me not" Shaming Women in Eighteenth-Century Rape Trials':

In the eighteenth century, rape trials were scenes of obscene shaming of violated women. English rape law supported the rich and the male; therefore, single women were at a disadvantage from the beginning. This phenomenon was commented on and challenged by writers at the end of the eighteenth century, including William Blake. This paper interprets Blake’s narrative poem Visions of the Daughters of Albion as a literary case study depicting the rhetoric of shaming. To show how language was used as a tool for shaming in a courtroom setting, I analyse the script of a trial from 1793. William Blake, by giving voice to her violated female character, Oothoon, used poetry and art to envision how women could refuse to be seen as objects defined by their chastity or the loss thereof.

Noémi Pintér is a member of faculty at Eötvös Loránd University.

'"Theotormon hears me not" Shaming Women in Eighteenth-Century Rape Trials' can be downloaded from The AnaChronisT web site (open access).