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Gender Roles In Porphyria's Lover And My Last Duchess By Robert Browning

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Robert Browning, a Victorian poet, is well known for his use of dramatic monologue. Robert Browning use of dramatic monologue in his poems, “Porphyria's Lover” and “My Last Duchess” separates the speaker from the poet and allows the reader to use the speaker’s words to uncover Browning’s actual meaning (Greenblatt 1275). By using the dramatic monologue, in his poems “Porphyria's Lover” and “My Last Duchess,” Browning depicts the gender roles of the patriarchal society seen during the Victorian era.
As stated before, the Victorian era was a patriarchal society. A patriarchal society is a society in which men have all of the power and women have little to none. In the Victorian society, women had no rights or freedoms. They were often seen as objects to possess, rather than actual people. Women were often assigned to strict gender roles and never allowed to stray from them. Gender is an idea that was constructed by society to distinguish the difference between sexes, male and female. Gender roles often depict women as the weaker sex, reinforcing the notion that are no more than objects for men to own. These gender roles were so strict during the Victorian time that men and women were divided into separate spheres of society. According to the book, Sex and Suffrage in Britain, during the Victorian era, “men possessed the capacity for reason, action, aggression, independence, and self-interest [thus belonging to the public sphere]. Women inhabited a separate, private sphere, one suitable for the so called inherent qualities of femininity: emotion, passivity, submission, dependence, and selflessness, all derived, it was claimed insistently, form women’s sexual and reproductive organization” (Kent 30). These types of assumption lead to men gaining all of the power in society while women were excepted to become perfect figure according to men.
In the poems “Porphyria’s Lover” and “My Last Duchess” Browning objectifies the women, using them as sexualized objects. Browning’s poem, “Porphyria’s Lover” is about two lovers secretly meeting at a cottage during a stormy night. When Porphyria first enters the cottage, the speaker describes her as she removes her clothes, “and laid her soiled gloves by, untied / Her

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