Eunuchs in popular culture

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Eunuchs have appeared in many films, works of literature, and in popular culture.

Anime and manga

  • In the Japanese anime
    Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion
    (R2), the de facto rulers of the oligarchic Chinese Federation comprise a group of eight eunuchs called "High Eunuchs".
  • In the manga Red River, one of the main villains, Urhi, is a eunuch.
  • Eunuchs feature prominently in the anime Raven of the Inner Palace, which takes place in a fictionalized version of ancient China.

Comics

  • The titular character of That Yellow Bastard (February–July 1996), a limited comic book series, the sixth in Dark Horse Comics' Sin City series, is a eunuch. (The series was adapted as a film, titled Sin City (2005), also known as Frank Miller's Sin City.)

Films

Games

  • In the video game The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (2015), the loyal servant and bookie of head Redanian Intelligence Sigismund Dijkstra is a eunuch, called Happen the Eunuch. He takes care of the Bathhouse in Novigrad, which is open to both sexes.

Literature

Pre-19th century

  • Eunuchus (The Eunuch) is a comedy by the Roman playwright Terence.
  • Several tales of the
    Arabian Nights focus on eunuchs.[1]
  • The character of the Pardoner in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales (late 14th century), is implied to be a eunuch or homosexual.
  • In William Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night (c. 1601), Viola initially decides to disguise herself as a eunuch named Cesario in order to serve Duke Orsino.
  • In The Country Wife (1675) by William Wycherley, the main character, Mr. Horner, pretends to be a man turned eunuch by impotence caused by syphilis, in order to gain access to the bedrooms of married women.
  • Eunuchs feature prominently in
    Lettres Persanes
    (1722) about Persian visitors to 18th-century France.
  • One of the characters that Voltaire's Candide (1759) meets on his adventures is a eunuch.
  • In Tristram Shandy (1759) by Laurence Sterne, Tristram has an accident with a window and Uncle Toby has a war injury.[2]
  • Vathek by William Beckford — alternatively titled Vathek, an Arabian Tale or The History of the Caliph Vathek — was written in 1782 in French but first published in English with a translation by Reverend Samuel Henley (1786). The first French edition, Vathek, was published in 1786. The character of Vathek is a caliph who has a retinue of eunuchs.

19th century

  • Don Juan (1819–1824) by Lord Byron, in Cantos V and VI, has a eunuch from the Sultan's harem. The eunuch buys Juan, a non-Muslim, as a slave, brings him to the sultan's palace in Constantinople, and threatens to castrate him if he does not put on a dress. Juan is presented to the sultan as Juanna and spends the night in the women's quarters.
  • The Temptation of Saint Anthony (1874) by Gustave Flaubert is set during one night in the late 3rd or early 4th century in the Egyptian desert. The character Montanus is a eunuch.

20th century

  • The Daughter of Heaven, originally published as La Fille du Ciel (1911) by Pierre Loti and Judith Gautier, translated by Ruth Helen Davis (1913)[3]
  • In Robert E. Howard's short story "The Scarlet Citadel" (1933), the main antagonist has a eunuch prison guard named Shukeli, in whom normal human passions have been replaced by extreme sadism.
  • In Constant Lambert's Music Ho! A Study of Music in Decline, the title alludes to a short passage in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra: ALL: The music, ho! Enter Mardian the Eunuch. CLEOPATRA: Let it alone; let's to billiards.
  • The eunuch Manan is a major character in The Tombs of Atuan (1971), the second book from Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea series. The story largely takes place in a large convent where no men are allowed, so a number of other eunuchs are mentioned. One among them is Duby, who Manan plays a stick game with.
  • Bagoas, the eunuch favorite of Alexander the Great's, is the main character and narrator of The Persian Boy (1972), an historical novel by Mary Renault.
  • The Alteration (1976) by Kingsley Amis is an "alternative history" set in 20th-century England about a boy soprano and eunuch.
  • Suttree (1979) by Cormac McCarthy has a eunuch named Thersites who yells at passersby from his window in McAnally Flats.
  • Castrati singers in 18th-century Italy are the main characters of Anne Rice's novel Cry to Heaven (1982).
  • The Queen Salmissra, in David Eddings' series The Belgariad (1982–1984) and The Malloreon (1987–1991), is only allowed to be served by eunuchs. Her chief eunuch, Sadi, becomes a principal character in The Malloreon, and is referred to in The Prophecy as "The Man who is no Man."
  • For the greater part of Iain Banks' novel The Wasp Factory (1984), the 16-year-old narrator Frank Cauldhame claims to be a eunuch, the result of being savaged by a dog when he was an infant. At the novel's climax, Frank discovers that he was, in fact, born female.
  • The society described in Rieko Yoshihara's Japanese novel (and later anime series) Ai no Kusabi (1987) has within its caste system "Furniture", or eunuchs who act as servants to the highest social class. The character Katze was once Furniture but now works on the black market.
  • Wilbur Smith's Egyptian series of novels about ancient Egypt, beginning with River God (1991), follow the adventures of a talented eunuch named Taita.
  • Departures (1993) by Harry Turtledove is a story collection. The story "Counting Potsherds", originally published in Amazing Stories (March 1989), has a eunuch named Mithredath.[4][5]
  • Domino (1995) by Ross King is about an Italian castrato singer.
  • The Eunuch: A Dark Tale (1995) by Richard Bird.
  • The Last Castrato (1996) by John Spencer Hill is the first book in the Mystery of Florence series.
  • The Rose Crossing (1996) by Nicholas Jose is set on the Indian Ocean in the 17th century. It has a eunuch character, Lou Lo.
  • In The Plotters (1996) by Gareth Roberts, Robert Hay's eunuchs attacked Vicki Pallister to get information about the First Doctor Who.
  • Last Evenings on Earth (Llamadas Telefonicas in Spanish) was published in 1997. It's a collection of short stories by Chilean author Roberto Bolaño. It was translated by Chris Andrews in 2006. The short story "Mauricio ('The Eye') Silva" is about a man who rescues a castrated boy from a brothel in India.

21st century

Music

  • The punk rock band the Descendents wrote a song about a eunuch called "Eunuch Boy", which was on their 1996 comeback album Everything Sucks.

Television

  • In the TV show Major Dad, a eunuch was in charge of the security wives of Emir of Katodd.
  • In the Red Dwarf episode "Marooned", Rimmer is said to have been Alexander the Great's chief eunuch in a past life.
  • The character
    Naboo the Enigma, from the British comedy act and television series The Mighty Boosh
    , is a eunuch.
  • In the HBO show Game of Thrones supporting character Varys is a eunuch, as are the elite warriors of the Unsullied.
  • In the British Television programme "Peep Show", Mark is described as a eunuch by Big Suze in the episode "Sisterning",
  • In the South Korean drama Love in the Moonlight, one of the main characters is a girl who's disguised as a eunuch.
  • In the Turkish historical drama
    Hurrem Sultan
    's closest confidant.
  • In the British TV comedy "Blackadder", (Series 1, episode 2, "Born to be King"), set In the 15th century, the character 'McAngus' mistakes Blackadder, Duke of Edinburgh, as a eunuch, due to his strange appearance and high-pitched voice; ("I am NOT a eunuch", Blackadder tells McAngus, who replies "Well, you sound like one to me!"). In the same episode, Blackadder has a conversation with his brother, Harry prince of Wales, who insists that eunuchs are an essential part of any celebration.[6]
  • The Chinese television series Empresses in the Palace (2011) has several eunuch characters.

References

  1. ^ "Tale of the First Eunuch, Bukhayt". Globusz.com. Retrieved 2014-04-24.
  2. .
  3. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Daughter of Heaven, by Pierre Loti And Judith Gautier". www.gutenberg.org. 1913. Retrieved 2022-08-21.
  4. .
  5. ^ Turtledove, Harry (1993). "Excerpt of "Counting Potsherds" in Departures". Penguin Random House Common Reads. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  6. ^ "Blackadder S01E02 Born to be King – Dailymotion Video". 12 June 2021.