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Much Ado About Nothing Feminist Analysis

Decent Essays

Much Ado About Nothing considers many political and social topics, the most popular being the mistreatment of women in a male-oriented society. Throughout the play, women are referred to as property instead of people and their opinions are muted and ignored. Benedicts unrealistic view of women shows how females are based off unrealistic qualities instead of who they are as a person, not to mention Hero’s heaviness of marrying a man who she met only a short while before and had no voice as a woman about the marriage itself. Another great example would be how Claudio and Leonato fight over Hero and how her virginity is the only thing that made her marriageable in Shakespearean times. Sexism was a huge driving point in the play, and the women in it were severely discriminated against.

Benedict in the play claimed that he himself would never fall in love, and if he did, his woman of choice had to be perfect in his own eyes (very unrealistically).
“One woman is fair, yet I am well; another is wise, yet
I am well; another virtuous, yet I am well; but till all …show more content…

Benedict during the early stages of the play quotes that his woman has to be (rather unrealistically) perfect and he would only choose a woman if they meet his standards, and not to mention Hero’s objection against her marriage and due to her being a woman- her objections being silenced simply because of her gender. Not only are women thought to be perfect, their virginity itself was one of the main things that made a woman marriageable and if they were not ‘pure’ in a sense, they would be shamed due to the thought of the woman being a whore for having sex before marriage. Sexism is a huge driving force in the play itself, and even in today’s time, leaving women discriminated against and ignored because they are ‘simply a

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