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Essay On Social Morality In Macbeth

Decent Essays

To elaborate upon the notion behind Macbeth’s take on social customs, it is worth considering the aspect in which gender plays a divisive role, addressing masculinity to be considered superior in all societal functions. The machinations at work driving the play’s narrative forward are parallel to the guises both the witches as well as Lady Macbeth undertake in order to achieve their ends. Upending against the narrative was the perceived notion that reigned within the time of Shakespeare through which public norms had enabled an extensive division between the genders took root as the social norms of the age. Through his utilization of powerful, dominant female characters, Shakespeare writes Macbeth against the social norms of the age. …show more content…

Coursing through the events of the play—the soldier, the thane, the killer, and the guilty, Macbeth becomes them all. Time and time again, Macbeth must prove to the world who he is; the witches, the King, Duncan, even his own wife doubts his potential. It is this shifting conscience that exists as Macbeth’s sympathy, as well as his destruction, casting himself further down the path of the damned all to prove his manhood. Macbeth is of the notion that “undaunted mettle should compose nothing but males” (1.7.73–74). The women he encounters throughout the play are able to control him to further their own ends. The witches and his wife, regardless of the implications of their ambiguous gendered identities, utilize feminine methods of achieving power to further manipulate their supposedly masculine ambitions. Whether because of the restraints of her society or because she feels unable to commit the murders herself, Lady Macbeth instead relies on methods such as deception rather than violence in order to achieve her ends. Women, the play implies, possess the ability to be just as ambitious and cruel as their male counterparts, albeit the social constructs of society deny them more direct means of pursuing these grand ambitions on their own. The perceived disruption of social norms may also be interpreted through Shakespeare’s depiction of the Witches. Veiled behind facial hair and dubious guises, Banquo writes them off, stating that, “You should be women, and yet your

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