Absent Mother Trope in King Lear

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In this essay, I intend to scrutinize a brief etymology of the word issue, using the Oxford English Dictionary. My goal is to provide alternative interpretations to the following line from King Lear, spoken by Kent: “I cannot wish the fault undone, the issue of it/ being so proper” (1.1.16). The fault, or offense, Kent mentions is the illegitimate birth of Edmund. I then argue that alternative interpretations, derived from various resonances of the word issue, prove Shakespeare’s deliberate word choice to set up the play as a tragedy of masculinity, wherein the absence of a maternal figure causes a lack of counterbalance to male authority.
Kent refers to Edmund himself as an “issue” (1.1.16). Here, issue retains its third Oxford English Dictionary definition (see in-text notation) meaning (3) (formal or Law) children of one’s own. Though illegitimate, Edmund is Gloucester’s own son. Other senses of the word issue include: (1) an important topic or problem for debate or discussion, (2) the action of supplying or distributing an item for use, sale, or official purposes, (4) (Middle English, from Old French) the action of flowing or coming out, and (5) (dated) a result or outcome of something (“Issue”). Combining some of these definitions gives us alternative interpretations to what Kent is saying in the aforementioned quote.
Firstly, the chief sense of the word issue, (1) an important topic or problem for debate or discussion, coupled with (3) and (5) above, provides one such interpretation: the child itself, i.e., Edmund, will be a problem for the parent. King Lear has three examples of children playing the part of doting loved ones but doubling as their parents’ real troubles. All three children – Edmund, Goneril, and Regan – ...

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...es see fit. We see through Goneril and Regan’s self-serving actions (including a mutual pursuit of extramarital relationships) that they resemble their father. Along these lines, one reading of Cordelia is that she is too proudly glued to her principles, stubborn like her father in refusing to give up as she loses everything. While this interpretation describes children as extensions of their parents, it really describes them as extensions of their fathers (as there are no mothers in the play). Again, fathers influence what the children become; and, most of the children fall prey to the tragedy of masculinity. Had the children had mother figures, the outcome of the play would have been different. Even Lear, who knows his days are numbered, seeks a motherly figure to nurse him.
Old age is like a reversion to childishness and he too beckons the mother, who is absent.

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