@article{article_1702178, title={Carnivalesque Resistance in Restoration Theatre: Morality, Eroticism, and Discourse in the Film, The Libertine}, journal={IDEAS: Journal of English Literary Studies}, volume={5}, pages={59–74}, year={2025}, DOI={10.62352/ideas.1702178}, author={Sarıbaş, Serap}, keywords={Söylemsel direniş, Beden temsili, Karnavalesk estetik, Restorasyon dönemi, Tiyatro tarihi}, abstract={This study aims to examine, within a multilayered theoretical framework, the theatre of Restoration-era England as represented in the film The Libertine (2005), directed by Laurence Dunmore. Adapted from the eponymous stage play (1994) by Stephen Jeffreys, this cinematic work foregrounds the life story of John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, an intellectually and literarily provocative figure, and reveals how theatre functioned as a space of cultural, aesthetic, and political contestation in seventeenth-century England. The film not only portrays Wilmot’s individual moral decline and hedonistic lifestyle but also exposes the discursive functions of theatre in relation to structures of power and the mechanisms of public representation and ideological domination. Following the reopening of English theatres after the Restoration, particularly within the royal patronage of court theatres, an aesthetic climate emerged in which moral boundaries were transgressed and theatrical space became infused with eroticism, satire, and political critique. In this context, The Libertine dramatically illustrates how theatre could be appropriated both as an instrument for the ideological reproduction of hegemonic authority and as a subversive arena for the testing of expressive freedom. A striking example of this tension can be seen in Wilmot’s theatrical production, which, though initially commissioned by King Charles II and subsequently transformed into a satirical attack on the throne, is presented not merely as a personal act of literary defiance but as a historical example of how theatre could influence public consciousness while simultaneously confronting mechanisms of censorship. Thus, The Libertine configures the stage as a space of confrontation and reckoning, where social, sexual, and political tensions converge, thereby inviting a renewed critical engagement with the dramaturgy of the Restoration period. Through the character of Elizabeth Barry, the film interrogates the representation of women on stage, examining how female bodies are positioned within a patriarchal economy of spectatorship and how they are simultaneously rendered both as objects of desire and as emergent subjects through the act of performance. Barry’s transition to the stage is explored not merely as an aspect of her acting career but as a symbolic process of transformation tied to questions of public visibility, gendered performance, and the construction of female subjectivity in the Restoration theatre. The interplay between bodily exhibition, theatrical renderings of moral decay, and the transformative power of performance art constitutes one of the film’s core dramatic concerns.}, number={2}, publisher={İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Araştırmaları Derneği / English Language and Literature Research Association of Turkey}