Alison Findlay
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Bastardy and evil
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Bastardy is condemned by the highest moral authority, divine law, which is incorruptible. Religious authority formed the backbone of patriarchal order in Renaissance England so the spiritual condemnation of bastardy had important economic and social dimensions. In short, bastardy was ideal to create a humanised version of the morality Vices in a secular play while maintaining an easily identifiable evil 'type'. The majority of Renaissance plays linking bastardy and the Church do so to criticise Catholicism. The Bible's exclusion of illegitimates from the kingdom of heaven is a starting point for characters who, instead of being allied with satanic powers, are utterly detached from religious doctrine, unnervingly atheistic in outlook. These characters make an outright rejection of the moral order which labelled bastardy as the accursed share. Fears about new rational thinking were actually exacerbated by the Protestant culture.

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Illegitimate power

Bastards in Renaissance Drama

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