Women in Shakespeare Essay

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    William Shakespeare, one of the most famous writers in history, viewed gender roles as every male would have during the 16th century. From the 16th century to even now, there are people who believe that men should rule everything, and women have no say in anything. Between these time periods the men would run the government, be the voters, dictate relationships, and receive the education they needed to be successful. The Taming of the Shrew is a piece of writing that represents Shakespeare belief

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    In many of Shakespeare’s plays, he uses women to reflect on the social structures of Elizabethan England. Specifically, in Titus Andronicus and A Comedy of Errors, Shakespeare appears to take a very feministic approach on the role of women within society. Although women were not allowed the same privileges as men during this time period, Shakespeare seems to attribute agency to the female characters within his plays. In Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus and A Comedy of Errors, he uses allusions, metaphorical

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    Nothing Shakespeare does much more by exploring the treatment of women by males in his Elizabethan society. The attitude towards women as a mere commodity of men is evident in the objectifying nature of the actions and words of the men. Shakespeare also explores the values of women being inferior to men which reinforce the phallocentric values within Shakespeare’s Elizabethan society. The value of women being based on mere elements such as beauty and chastity is also explored by Shakespeare in the

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    the cross dressing of women. The cross dressing of women occurred in Cymbeline, The Two Gentleman of Verona, and The Merchant of Venice. Shakespeare appeared to be ahead of his time in knowing what we know now. Through showcasing women, successfully disguising as men Shakespeare proves that gender is nothing more than a performance. During this era, women were not allowed to play women parts in the Shakespeare plays. However, this did not stop Shakespeare from having women parts in his plays. Having

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    literature. William Shakespeare and his literature were no exception to this as they were subjected and influenced by these gender issues. One of his more infamous works of literature that display these gender issues is the Shakespearean play Othello. Throughout the play, gender issues that occurred during the time of Shakespeare are portrayed, more notably how Shakespeare viewed women, how men viewed women, and how gender influenced the story and the choices that were available in for women during that

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    in Europe, females were viewed as inferior to men, therefore women were not given the same rights as men. Society believed that women were reliant and weak, that only men had the potential to be independent and strong. Since William Shakespeare grew up in this atmosphere, it is not surprising that Shakespeare follows the societal norms, regarding gender, in his life and his plays. A deeper understanding of Shakespeare’s views towards women can be interpreted through his playwright as well as his personal

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    Juliet Shakespeare treats the female roles as superfluous or extraneous, yet throughout the play, he allows one female to break the stereotype for women and be just as daring and witty as the men. In this play, Shakespeare writes that women are unsophisticated and not capable of making their own decisions. Shakespeare made his women overly dependent on men and wrote them to believe they physically could not live without any men in their lives. During the progression of the play Shakespeare shows reverence

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    Thesis Statement: In the play ‘Othello’ the women showed characteristics of feminism but were portrayed as inferior. (Now state why Shakespeare would have wanted to do this? Was he, in fact, a feminist himself or was he creating a warning to those that dared to challenge their role in society?) The 3 questions: 1) Why did Shakespeare Want to portray women in that way in Othello?what was his main reason for doing so? 2) Was Shakespeare, in fact, a feminist himself or was he creating a warning

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    Shakespeare Essay In the play Midsummer Night's Dream Shakespeare wrote the play with traditional gender roles of the time, where men dominate and women are subservient in the community. Shakespeare shows these gender roles when Hermia’s father has the “authority” to choose who she can marry. Further, we find a male character, Demitrius, treating a women he loves, Helena, with complete disrespect. Finally, as normal for his time, Shakespeare casts all the actors in Pyramus and Thisbe with

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    play, Taming of the Shrew, William Shakespeare comments on social expectations in the Elizabethan Era by consistently placing men over women in the sake of value and worth. The reader is placed into a very male-dominant time period, in which the social expectations were that women did everything a man told them to. Due to writing a play on this subject, Shakespeare is commenting on the inaccurate sexism that is going on, and portraying to the reader that if a women was not what her man wanted her to

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