The effect the men have on the women as well as the effect the women have on the men is seen in Shakespeare's “Taming of the Shrew” and the movie “10 Things I Hate About You”. The reason the characters are the way they are at the end of the play and the movie is because of the people around them. The changes that occurred in Katherine and Kat as well as the changes that occurred in Petruchio and Patrick throughout the play and the movie are due to gender identity. People can change others in many different ways. Some people change for the better and some people change for the worse. Both of these situations occur both in the book “Taming of the Shrew” as well as the movie “Ten things I Hate About You”.
The men have a huge impact on the two women Bianca and Katherine as seen in both the book and the
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In the movie Katherine being as untamed as she is changes Petruchio. Due to her shrewish ways she makes it so that he basically has to give his full effort if he wants to marry her. She puts him through hell and back until she gets tamed and it changes him into someone more responsible and more trustworthy from it. Bianca takes lucentio as her suitor and makes him the one she wants she doesn’t just let him use her like every other guy she talks to. In the end they love each other due to the impact they had on each other. In the movie Kat changes Patrick from a guy that is just getting paid to go to prom with her, into a guy that genuinely loves her. He got money to do it at first but he then realized he actually loved her and it wasn’t for the money. He used the money that he got to take her to prom and bought her a new guitar. In the movie Bianca takes Cameron and changes him a little bit due to her realizing Cameron actually loved her. She changes Cameron’s way of thinking because now that she knows he loves her he becomes more comfortable around her and treats her even
A principal theme throughout Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew is the battle of the sexes. The battle primarily focuses on the relationship between Petruchio and Katherine, otherwise known as Kate. They each struggle for supremacy in a classic confrontation between male and female until Kate succumbs to Petruchio's dominance for the first time during Act IV, Scene V when she states "What you will have it named, even that it is. And so it shall be so for Katherine." In this first act of deference to her husband it remains unclear if Kate simply decides to play along and behave as the traditional Elizabethan wife so they can continue on their travels, or if she has an epiphany and realizes her preordained role in the traditional
Gender Politics encapsulates the hierarchy that separates men and women on an imaginary ladder based off of class or social status. In ‘The Taming of the Shrew’ and ‘10 Things I Hate About You’, men are portrayed as superior to women. Whereas women on the other hand are portrayed as subservient servants, and in many cases, more like objects than people. An example of Gender Politics clearly evident in the play, The Taming of the Shrew is when Katherine is bargained for by Baptista, without her consent nor say. This can be shown during Act II, Scene I when Baptista is convincing Petruchio to “woo” Katherine over along with a bribe.
Feminist and cultural historians have convincingly demonstrated that "rebellious women" were a concern for englishmen during the late sixteenth centuries (Detmer 273). The idea of “taming” a women is one that men can find useful, though women can also benefit from. Katherine cynically conforms to expectation, and in doing so displays how The Taming of the Shrew is a critique on gender essentialism. The Oxford English Dictionary states, essentialism is a belief that things have a set of characteristics which make them what they are. This theory in regards to gender refers to the fact that men and women have been born into particular roles which they must abide by. The men in this play measure their own fulfilment of gender roles through their relationships with women. Petruchio believes that if a man is unable to tame his woman, he himself is no better then a shrew. In this essay I will argue that Katherine 's transformation from miserable “shrew” to obedient wife signifies the necessity of assuming proper gender roles to survive in the patriarchal world of William Shakespeare 's The Taming of the Shrew. This is depicted through Katherine 's journey during the whole of the play, her actions, how she acts around others and how others act around her all come back to Katherine learning to play her part as the ideal 16th century woman.
In Shakespeare’s dramatic comedy, “The Taming of the Shrew,” Shakespeare chooses to have one of the main characters played as a woman, despite the time the play was written. Back then it was a male centered world, so they did not know how to deal with Katherine’s erratic and bold behaviors. Kate was known for her sharp tongue and her quick temper, especially to those that tried to win her love. Many of her sister’s suitors would often avoid Katherine in fear of getting knocked around or verbally abused. On of them, an old man named Gremio went so far as to refer to her as, “a fiend of hell” (1.1 89). She would not be satisfied with such pathetic and weak men as Gremio or any of Bianca’s other suitors, but who would dare to take their shot at taming the mighty Shrew?
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to three, quoted by the famous playwright William Shakespeare. Never has this been so true in the two films Taming of the shrew and 10 things I hate about you. Femininity has changed dramatically between the elizabethan era and today's era this change is displayed greatly in both tammy of the shrew and 10 things i hate about you. Today the women of the world are not known to up hold the man to be the lord of the house and to obey by his word but to show respect to the man of the house as the man is to show the same amount of respect or even more to the women of the house. In today's world both the man and women are both as equal in the way that they share the
The Taming of the Shrew remains a very controversial and debated work of literature. The play reflects views of marriage and gender relations that were commonplace at the time it was written, but are often seen as insensitive and sexist in modern society. The play focuses on the eponymous shrew, the outspoken and sharp-tongued Katharina, her husband Petruchio’s attempts at forcing her to conform to be submissive and obedient to him, and his eventual success. Petruchio’s success at converting Katharina is often read as an expression of the misogynistic attitudes commonly held at the time. However, upon closer reading, and examining the text with a better understanding of the time period it was written in, The Taming of the Shrew can be read
Gender roles have normally been dominated by men, with women unwillingly submitting to them. In William Shakespeare’s, The Taming of the Shrew, this idea is presented with the characters Kate and Petruchio. Kate brings about a new attitude of women becoming dominant that is not accepted by Petruchio or the rest of society. Without any support to help her, Kate is unable to keep her own character and conforms to be an obedient wife. In the play Taming of the Shrew, Shakespeare uses the character Kate to display men’s power to break down a woman’s confidence and to portray the patriarchal relationship in marriages of the time.
The Taming of the Shrew was no exception to the social norms of this time period, and is a sexist play filled with patriarchy. The misogynistic attitudes seen in The Taming of the Shrew are a reflection of the male dominated
Over the past 400 or so years since Shakespeare wrote _The Taming of the Shrew_, many writers, painters, musicians and directors have adapted and reformed this play of control and subjugation into timeless pieces of art. In _10 Things I Hate About You_ and Kiss Me Kate from two very different times in the twentieth century, and paintings of Katherina and Bianca from the late nineteenth century, the creators of these adaptations have chosen to focus on the role of the two main female characters in the play. The ideas surrounding these women have changed through the years, from Katherina and Bianca simply being young women who deviated from the norm of Shakespeare’s time to women who embody
When being who you are is seen as a shrew, everyone around you will believe you need to change or be tamed. Because Kate is know for her sharp tongue Petruchio believes she ends to be tamed. The gender stereotypes in Shakespearean days cause Kate to be treated poorly, emotionally harmed by Petruchio, and eventually robbed of her true personality. Initially in Shakespeare’s day, women’s characters in a play are played by men and women re not treated as equals. In these days, women re inferior to men which is one of the many reasons Kate is considered possession in Petruchios mind. Petruchio believes “women are made to bear, and so are you” (195). Petruchio is only marring Kate for heath and he claims that he is the only person who could possible tame her. When the men who are women are acting, hey are instructed to speak a certain way. Rosenberg states women characters are to speak with a “soft low tongue and low courtesy” (Bloom 2010). Speaking quietly in Shakespeare's day means obedience to command. Arthurs
The definition of a hero is a person, who in the opinion of others, has special achievements, abilities, or personal qualities, and is regarded as a role model. (Dictionary.com) In the two plays and movie, Taming of the Shrew, Antigone, and The Long Walk Home, there are many heroic characters such as, Kate from Taming of the Shrew, Antigone from Antigone, and Miriam Thompson from The Long Walk Home. Taming of the Shrew is a play that tells of a tale of one of two sisters, Kate and Bianca, trying to get suitors to marry. However, their dad says that the younger sister, Bianca, can not get married until the older sister, Kate, gets married first. The problem with this is that many people would consider Kate to be a shrew, which means
William Shakespeare 's ‘The Taming of the Shrew’ is a controversial comedy that has more than 1 interpretation. The 2 prominent interpretations is that it a misogynistic play or that it is a love story about a man liberating a woman. This play has been adapted into any movies the 2 that were studied were ‘The Taming of the Shrew’, produced in 1967 and ‘10 Things I Hate About You’, made in 1999. Upon viewing these 2 movies I found that ‘The Taming of the Shrew’ had a great deal of misogyny throughout the plot. However, I found ‘10 Things I Hate About You’ was portrayed as a love story and because of this I thought I was, until I thought about the fact that someone was paid to take her out was a nasty thing to do. So as a result of this I
In the play The Taming of the shrew by, William Shakespeare, there are a lot of sexist remarks and feminist criticism that comes to affect at the beginning to the end of the play. Its scenario is obtained from the popular " war of the sexes" theme in which males and females are put against one another for dominance in marriage.On the other hand, men had more advantages than women throughout the Elizabethan era.
In Shakespeare’s ‘The Taming of the Shrew’, women are shown to be objectified and subservient to men, conforming to the accepted gender roles that are expected of them. Patriarchal views of femininity support the authority of men in society, as well as subjugation and subordination of women. As written of the representation of women in early literature, “the focus of interest is on the heroine’s choice of marriage partner, which will decide her ultimate social position and … determine her happiness ” Yet through the story Shakespeare subtly presents a relationship which is built upon trust, involving two intelligent characters who come to appreciate one another. Which can be supported by the view of later feminists, who agree that it is not necessarily individual men who oppress women, but the underlying prejudice of a patriarchal society.
As I was given the film Amelie, I chose the film The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty to make a comparison. Amelie and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty used different approaches of achieving their own newfound love in their own ways. In brief, Amelie had found joy in making a change to the lives of the people around her for the better. Whilst, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty took an adventure to find Sean O’Connell to save his position in his job. Therefore, each film take various motifs to show their approach in love.