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Question:
Discuss how gender and identity are explored in TWO Shakespearean writings. (MACBETH, AS YOU LIKE IT, TITUS ANDRONICUS.)
Part 4. The Final Paper
The Final Paper will have the following parts:
1. An introduction where you provide relevant background for
your presentation. This may be on Shakespeare, his plays, the theme you are
considering, or any relevant historical information. The introduction should
indicate why this topic is important for your chosen audience. At the end of
the introduction, you will state a thesis that makes an assertion about the
plays and their common theme.
2.
An examination of the way your chosen theme operates in
each of the three texts. Consider such issues as race, gender, justice, and/or
other themes from our class readings and discussions.
3.
Well-organized body paragraphs containing a close reading
of specific examples from the plays, including brief quotations. (Do not quote
extensive passages.)
4.
A conclusion that sums up the value of your research and
analysis and shows how understanding Shakespeare is important for your
particular audience.
5.
A works cited page (using MLA 8th edition
documentation style)
Documentation Style: The paper is to be formatted and documented in the Modern
Language Association (MLA) 8th edition style. For assistance
with MLA style, see the UMGC library MLA guide with MLA Citation
Examples: http://sites.umgc.edu/library/libhow/mla_examples.cfm
Deliverable for Part 4: The paper will consist of parts 1-5 above. Please
format the transcript in MLA style. The paper should be carefully edited and
proofread for standard use of English.
Purpose: The purpose of the project is to allow you an opportunity
to explore and develop a presentation to demonstrate why Shakespeare’s plays
are relevant in the contemporary world. In this project, you will address the importance of
Shakespeare’s literary contributions to contemporary culture by creating a
presentation that addresses the following situation:
Imagine that you are addressing a group about the importance and
relevance of Shakespeare to our own time. Your job is to convince the group of Shakespeare’s
ongoing importance by providing a close reading of three plays, with special
focus on one theme they all share. MACBETH, AS YOU LIKE IT, TITUS ANDRONICUS You must
choose two of these plays from our syllabus; the third does not have to be.
Your job is to examine each play in detail, providing a close reading and
interpretation that demonstrates (1) the theme and (2) the importance of the
theme to your specific contemporary audience.
Audience: Choose the audience for your presentation from among the
following. (You may suggest another group, but it must be approved by the
instructor.)
·
A college English
department that is considering creating a new themed Shakespeare course
You must use a minimum of five
scholarly sources. At least four sources must be from the UMUC databases. Please see
the sources below
Length: The paper will be from six to eight pages double-spaced
in Times Roman 12 (1,500 to 2,000 words).
Theme: Gender and Identity
You will examine the way this theme operates in each of the three plays
you will consider, using specific scenes and incidents to support your view of
how the theme operates in each work. Your overarching goal in discussing the
theme in these plays is to demonstrate the importance of Shakespeare’s work to
your audience. For example, if you are addressing a school board, you will use
the plays and their shared theme to show how important Shakespeare's work is
for students’ learning. If you are addressing the potential theater donors, you
will use the plays and their theme to show why Shakespeare is relevant to
contemporary audiences.
Answer
Shakespeare's Female Characters as Models for University Courses
One
prime task of university education is to open people's minds and increase their
problem-solving abilities. Indeed, most of the problems that humans face today
exist due to closed mindsets. For instance, significant environmental damages
occur because humans emphasize making profits and ignore conservation.
Similarly, radical religion, a facilitator of terrorism, war, and death, is
merely a human creation. Another critical area of this blindness manifests in
the gender imbalance, which itself threatens social stability. Shakespeare's
books provide a means to analyze older societies, real and fictitious, through
their characters and create a stage for cultural comparisons between these
societies and our own. Shakespearean plays explore the intricate relationship
between women and the broader society. In analyzing the female characters of
Shakespeare's plays Macbeth, As You Like It, and Titus Andronicus, students will be exposed to concepts of gender that
do not conform to traditional societal norms.
Shakespeare Exposes Women's Mistreatment
These
plays help institutions to expand the discourse about female mistreatment and
identify the baselessness of these norms. It has become normal to treat females
as second class humans across the world. For instance, the number of women holding political posts
across the world is conspicuously low. It is time that students critically
assessed the sources of these attitudes that normalize discriminating women
(Kimbrough 175). Shakespeare's plays provide an excellent foundation for
beginning such a discussion because, just like in modern societies, women in
these plays are victims of baseless traditional notions.
In
As You like It, society disregards
women for no other reason but that they are women. For example, Duke Frederik,
while expelling Rosalind away from his court, claims that he is doing so
because Rosalind is too "smooth" (Shakespeare, "As You Like It,"
I.iii.20). This instance implies that considering someone as "too feminine"
is enough reason to deny them comfort. Moreover, Touchstone reveals how society
applies a reductionist approach to women's personalities. According to the
character, having knowledge of poetry and being pretentious are the only
metrics for determining the perfect woman. Moreover, Touchstone views women as
lairs by default, and for him, to have an honest woman is like "to have
honey a sauce to sugar" (Shakespeare, "As You Like It," III.iii.62).
In
Titus Andronicus, Tamora experiences an
injustice from Titus when the latter kills her eldest son. Being a woman, she
cannot do anything but cry. Moreover, the casualness with which Chiron and
Demetrius plan to rape Lavinia or "to pluck a dainty doe to ground"
(Shakespeare, "Titus Andronicus," II.ii.96), and the ease with which
they execute their plan before cutting off the victim's tongue and hands,
mirror both the literal and figurative aspects of day-to-day situations that
women experience across the world. In the literal aspect, cases of women undergoing
rape and gruesome murders are common in news outlets. Figuratively, society
silences rape victims through victim shaming, thereby essentially cutting out
victims' tongues. Moreover, just like Lavinia's assailants taunt her, many
rapists do not face punishment or imprisonment and continue to threaten and
taunt their victims.
As
evident in the plays and modern examples, societies mistreat women, and it is
time universities spearheaded discussions through Shakespearean plays to expose
this mistreatment. Shakespeare demonstrates how people use customs with no
logical bases to oppress and despise women; there are no logical foundations
for such customs. Only by acknowledging this baselessness of can more students
support women's rights and champion equality.
Women as Influencers of Humanism and Reason
Shakespeare
provides a platform to demonstrate the influential role that women play in the
world and demonstrate their indelibility in society. The perception of women
as unnecessary and an inconvenience is prevalent today (Mehdi & Khoshkham
2), and there is a need to reemphasize the role of women in society; one only
has to look at the small number of women getting respectable employments
occupying top-level posts in governments and corporates as compared to men.
Also, in parts of the world, women have no female-friendly facilities in
institutions, and accessing basic things like sanitary pads and birth-control
services is difficult in some countries.
This female sidelining is not coincidental; it occurs because people think
women are useless; hence, they do not deserve positions, services, items, or
laws that specifically address their needs (Sorge 323). Shakespearean plays
provide a useful reference point from which universities can explore and
challenge these negative notions. Shakespeare provides a platform for female
characters from which people can analyze women's role in society. By no means
does Shakespeare attempt to over-romanticize the female character (Kimbrough
175). Instead, the author places the female character in the play's familiar
environment, and other than giving some women prominence based on their
positions as lead characters, neither does he undervalue the female character
nor portray her as a superhuman. Therefore, in a way, Shakespeare's plays
provide a "natural environment" for understanding women.
In
As You Like It, women like Rosalind,
Celia, and Audrey provide examples from which students can draw lessons about
objectivity, romance, self-esteem, and integrity. In the society that Shakespeare creates in
this play, people tend to gravitate towards the extreme, and women serve as
adjustments that return people to reason. For instance, when Jacques, who
claims that' tis good to be sad and say nothing" (Shakespeare, "As
You Like It," IV.i.73), adopts overly reductionist thinking that makes him
see nothing good about life and immerses him in perpetual sadness, Rosalind
reminds him that one is not better than a "post" if they can do
nothing but be sad (Shakespeare, "As You Like It," Iv.i.73). Rosalind shows the same objectivity when she
tries to prove to Orlando, herself, and other people that predeterminism does
not apply to romance. In other words, the character hypothesizes that the
universe does not, by default, assign love to particular pairs of people and
that someone can develop or lose romantic attraction to another person at any
time. The play also uses female characters to explore the meaning of true
friendship: Celia, whose connection with Rosalind is "dearer than the
natural bond of sisters" (Shakespeare, "As You Like It," I.ii.26),
embodies true friendship when she abandons her comfortable court life to follow
her cousin, whom Duke Frederick has expelled from his household.
The lessons that these characters espouse in the
examples above are crucial to university students, especially regarding
managing their expectations, finding value in living, and being sensitive.
Notably, romance-related suicides and homicides are common
among university students (Karbeyaz et al. 111). People have hung themselves or murdered their lovers just because they
have been "heartbroken." Perhaps by studying Rosalind's hypothesis
about love, people can become more realistic in understanding that love
sometimes ends. Also, through Celia and Rosalind's relationship, students can
learn and extend the debate about true friendship. For instance, during lessons
on
conflict theories, one can
create a lively class debate by telling students to dissect Rosalind and
Celia's relationship and find the common interest that sustains this
friendship. Therefore, female characters in Shakespearean plays expose a vast
cache of potential topics of debate, theories, and lessons and provide new
standpoints from which people can analyze, criticize, or support popular
theories.
Demonstrating the Dangers of Oppressing the Female
Men and women need to work together to
contribute to the world's progress. However, the female's opinion has been
sidelined in almost all critical sectors. In STEM professions, for instance,
women are conspicuously few, and this means that many research and development
facilities lack significant female contributions that could produce more
advanced, affordable, and effective processes, services, and goods. For
instance, studies hint that females better photographic memory than men (Wang
991), which means that investigative and research facilities might be missing a
lot by failing to employ women. However, apart from the loss that the world is
experiencing by underutilizing women, another danger in the form of women's
destructive power presents itself when society continues to oppress the female,
and Shakespeare explores this danger in characters like Lady Macbeth in Macbeth and Tamora in Titus Andronicus. Seeing no benefit in a
social structure that does not recognize them, these two women decide to
facilitate anarchy.
In Macbeth, the Victorian society dictates
that women remain unrecognized and that if they need to succeed, they have to
do so through their husbands' progress. This situation leaves Lady Macbeth with no other option but to
pursue her success through her husband's success (Mehdi &
Khoshkham 2). Lady Macbeth
dispises the powerlessness, poverty, and mediocre life that society assigns to people
based on their social class and gender, as evident in this excerpt:
To
be the same in thine own art and valour,
As
thou art in desire? Wouldst thou have that
Which
thou esteem' st the ornament of life,
And
live like a coward in thine own esteem
Letting
"I dare not" wait upon "I would,"
Like
the poor eat I' th' adage (Shakespeare, 'Macbeth," I.II.26)
Consequently, Lady
Macbeth adopts an unorthodox means to extricate herself from this
oppression and achieve her power and wealth goals: she convinces her husband to
destroy the establishment by killing the king. However, rather than getting the
comfort she wanted, Lady Macbeth exposes
herself and other people to more instability and suffering, especially when the
dead king's ghost starts to haunt her family. Therefore, by sidelining Lady
Macbeth, society triggers the woman's appetite for power and destruction (Zohreh 57).
Titus
Andronicus's Tamora also starts a deadly mission
after society denies her rights as a woman. By forcefully bringing Tamora to a
foreign land and killing Tamora's son, Titus leaves the woman hopeless. From
then onwards, Tamora has no other interests but to cause further destruction to
the already "headless Rome" (Shakespeare, "Titus of Andronicus,"
I.i.79). This example indicates
how a culture of hatred emerges when society disregards and oppresses women.
Conclusion
If the world is to have any hopes for stability,
universities need to acknowledge that society's discrimination of women is a
threat to world balance and underutilization of the feminine power. Thus,
universities must create courses that specifically target to expose this
imbalance and cure people's ignorance. Shakespearean plays provide great
examples from fictitious and real societies that can drive the discourse on
gender. Female characters in Titus
Andronicus, As You Like It, and Macbeth demonstrate women's power; in these
plays, women are sources of reason, integrity, and humanism. However, women
could also destroy the world if they continue to feel oppressed. Therefore,
these plays provide rich material for universities on gender studies.
Works Cited
Karbeyaz, Kenan, Mehmet Toygar, and Adnan
Çelikel. "Completed suicide among University Students in Eskisehir,
Turkey." Journal of forensic and legal medicine 44
(2016): 111-115.
Kimbrough,
Robert. "Macbeth: The Prisoner of Gender." Shakespeare
Studies (0582-9399), vol. 16, Jan. 1983, p. 175. EBSCOhost,
search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=asn&AN=7166190&site=eds-live&scope=site.
Mehdi
Amiri, and Sara Khoshkam. "Gender Identity and Gender Performativity in
Shakespeare's Selected Plays: Macbeth, Hamlet and Merry Wives of Windsor." Advances
in Language and Literary Studies, vol. 8, no. 4, Aug. 2017, pp.
1–7. EBSCOhost, doi:10.7575/aiac.alls.v.8n.4p.1.
Shakespeare, William. As you Like it, edited by
Wilbur Cross, Tucker Brooke, and Willard Durhan. 1919.
Shakespeare, William. Macbeth, edited by Richard Grant. Houghton,
Mifflin & Company. 1897.
Shakespeare, William. Titus Andronicus, edited by John Wilson. Cambridge University
Press. 1948.
Sorge,
Kelly. Masking Femininity: Women and Power in Shakespeare's Macbeth, As
You Like It, and Titus Andronicus. 2017,
https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1327&context=honors.
Wang, Bo. "Gender difference in
recognition memory for neutral and emotional faces." Memory 21.8
(2013): 991-1003.
Zohreh
Ramin. "Shakespeare's Richard III and Macbeth: A Foucauldian Reading." K@ta:
A Biannual Publication on the Study of Language and Literature, vol. 15, no. 2,
Jan. 2013, pp. 57–66. EBSCOhost,
search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsdoj&AN=edsdoj.4c7085710f442318f956f3c73e2178d&site=edslive&scope=site.
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