Skip to main content

How would you analyze "Ligeia"?

Edgar Allan Poe's short story "Ligeia" contains many of the tropes that define Poe as a master of the macabre: the story focuses on a man's reflection on his mysterious, frail wife Ligeia and her tragic death. After she passes, the narrator marries Lady Rowena Trevanion, of Tremaine. They coexist in a loveless marriage until she too falls ill and dies. The narrator prepares her body, but witnesses a miraculous transformation as she comes back to life as Lady Ligeia.

This work has much in common with "Morella," another Poe short story. Both stories have an unreliable narrator discussing his fixation on a beautiful, frail, brilliant, and ultimately supernatural woman. Many critics attribute this archetypal female figure in Poe's fiction to his relationships with his mother and his wife. Both women died young, and this had an obvious impact on the writer. Critic Alvaro Salas Chacón aptly characterizes this archetypal figure in Poe's fiction:  



"An intelligent, sickly, young wife—an idealized asexual type of woman.... Women in Poe's life and fiction reveal a fixation on the figure of his dead mother" (76).



Another key aspect of the story is Poe's emphasis on liminality throughout the tale. The story has a dreamlike (or nightmarish) quality; Poe uses this to reinforce the liminal nature of the titular character. Ligeia is a woman between life and death, between fantasy and reality. Indeed, the narrator struggles to recall the first time he met her:



"I cannot, for my soul, remember how, when, or even precisely where, I first became acquainted with the lady Ligeia. Long years have since elapsed, and my memory is feeble through much suffering."



Moreover, this establishes the narrator as a typical unreliable narrator. Readers are expected to take his tale as the truth, but there are obvious gaps in his story, and he reveals more about himself and his various flaws than he intends to.


Another scene that reinforces Poe's use of liminality is Rowena's decline, death, and eventual resurrection as Ligeia. The following passage is told almost through an opium fog:



"She swallowed the wine unhesitatingly, and I forbore to speak to her of a circumstance which must, after all, I considered, have been but the suggestion of a vivid imagination, rendered morbidly active by the terror of the lady, by the opium, and by the hour."



Thus, "Ligeia" is a prime example of Poe's various tropes. It has the morbid trademarks of the author, including an unreliable narrator, a hauntingly beautiful supernatural woman, and a chilling ending.


I pulled my textual evidence from:


http://www.eapoe.org/works/tales/ligeiag.htm


Chacón, Alvaro Salas. "Allusions to the Virgin Mary in Edgar A. Poe and Robert Lowell: An Unconscious Oedipal Process." Káñina: Revista de Artes y Letras. 22.2 (1998): 73-8.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is the meaning of "juggling fiends" in Macbeth?

Macbeth is beginning to realize that the three witches have been deceiving him since he first encountered them. Like jugglers, they have kept changing their forecasts in order create confusion. This is particularly apparent when the Second Apparition they raise in Act IV,   Scene 1 tells him that no man of woman born can overcome him in hand-to-hand battle--and then Macbeth finds himself confronted by the one man he has been avoiding out of a... Macbeth is beginning to realize that the three witches have been deceiving him since he first encountered them. Like jugglers, they have kept changing their forecasts in order create confusion. This is particularly apparent when the Second Apparition they raise in Act IV,   Scene 1 tells him that no man of woman born can overcome him in hand-to-hand battle--and then Macbeth finds himself confronted by the one man he has been avoiding out of a sense of guilt, and that man tells him: Despair thy charm. And let the angel whom thou still hast serve...

Discuss movements that were inspired by the Civil Rights Movement and list one success for each group.

African-Americans contributed in a very big way during World War II. These contributions were demonstrated at home and on the battlefield. After the war, African-Americans properly felt it was time for them to achieve equality with white Americans. During the 1950's, the modern Civil Rights Movement was born and it had a number of successes (integration of the military and Brown vs. Board of Education as examples.) This success inspired other activists to demand change... African-Americans contributed in a very big way during World War II. These contributions were demonstrated at home and on the battlefield. After the war, African-Americans properly felt it was time for them to achieve equality with white Americans. During the 1950's, the modern Civil Rights Movement was born and it had a number of successes (integration of the military and Brown vs. Board of Education as examples.) This success inspired other activists to demand change for their agendas. Two examples of moveme...

What are some tensions between men and women in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar?

Julius Caesar is a largely male-driven play. Calpurnia and Portia are the two main female characters, and they are both wives of major characters. Calpurnia is Julius Caesar’s wife. She makes public appearances with him, but there may be some awkwardness between them because of her inability to have children. He publicly tells Antony to touch Calpurnia to cure her of barrenness when he runs the Lupercal, a “holy race” and fertility festival. Calpurnia has... Julius Caesar is a largely male-driven play. Calpurnia and Portia are the two main female characters, and they are both wives of major characters. Calpurnia is Julius Caesar’s wife. She makes public appearances with him, but there may be some awkwardness between them because of her inability to have children. He publicly tells Antony to touch Calpurnia to cure her of barrenness when he runs the Lupercal, a “holy race” and fertility festival. Calpurnia has nightmares about Caesar’s death. She claims that she is not naturally super...