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Patriarchy And Sexuality In Shakespeare's Othello

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This essay tries to determine intersexual relationships between Shakespeare’s Othello (1603) and The Macbeth (1606). Some scholars approached this task by analyzing both male characters in relations to their female spouses, focusing on the ideas of patriarchy and sexuality. Instead, this essay will analyze the powerful characters of Desdemona and Lady Macbeth in relation to their husbands. Taking as a starting point the particular line from both plays, this analysis will then move to the close re-reading of the two female characters in order to produce an alternative reading of gender roles in both texts. In this way, we will identify and expand various loci of gender identities and roles within the texts, and further, gender reversal.
In the first scene of the second act in Shakespeare’s Othello, the Moor’s barques has just been arrived at the seaport in Cyprus with Othello’s attendants on board but separate from his young wife’s ship. Desdemona-his young wife- is already waiting for her husband outdoors near the harbor accompanied by Michael Cassio, Iago, and Emilia. It is at this moment that Desdemona’s eyes see her loving partner, and Othello pleased to see his “love” on the land. During this …show more content…

Lady Macbeth has female appearance and male ambitions, and Shakespeare (perhaps through the manipulative technic) shows that women could have same ambitions as men do. Although, the patriarchal boundaries and social structures still require the usage of men for the proper achievement of their (women) goals. In this way, Lady Macbeth overcomes the “expectations” of how woman suppose to behave. She ought to behave as male but not as her husband. She clearly performs a desire to be someone with lack of feelings and emotions, someone who is capable to carry a burden of responsibilities. By doing so, she labels Macbeth with lack of masculinity and

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