Shakespearean Comedies: Defining Gender Limitations
Shakespearean Comedies: Defining Gender Limitations
The paper discusses the feminist dimension of Shakespearean comedies, focusing on "As You Like It" and "Taming of the Shrew."
3,127 words (approx. 12.5 pages) |
9 sources |
MLA | 2005
Paper Summary:
The paper argues that Shakespeare's heroines were vital and constructive protagonists; they were fully realized, independent, and capable beings. Through the presentation of such examples of females within the framework of the comic, Shakespeare was able to argue for a re-evaluation of gender norms and stereotypes at a safe distance. The writer explains that the comic framework served as a type of buffer, allowing him to castigate his society without coming under attack for doing so because, in the end, he was writing comedy.
From the Paper:
"Shakespeare's comedies, possibly due to the unfailing tendency to unfairly contrast them to his tragedies and historical dramas, have never received the critical attention they deserve. His body of comedies, according to Milton Crane, contain some of Shakespeare's most insightful comments regarding human nature and society in addition to some of his most quotable and profound lines (68-69). Nevertheless, and in comparison to the attention given the other Shakespearian works/genres, his comedies have received comparatively scant attention. While Crane forwards explanatory theories, two in particular stand out. According to the first theory, Shakespeare's comedies are underappreciated because they do not subscribe to any set ad established definition of comedy. They rarely elicit laughter and, as Crane contends, are "sensible and serious" even as they are lighthearted (68). What this means is that according to the predominant critical view, as explained by Crane, critics have been unable to truly accept Shakespeare's comedies as comedies because they are not the thoroughly humorous, farcical or satirical works that they tend to categorize comedies as being. Instead, they are, at one and the same time, lighthearted and sensible and, tragic and comic, thereby defying any categorization (68). Consequently, the failure of Shakespearian comedies to fit neatly into predefined conceptions of comedy have enforced their comparison to his other works, with the result being that his comedies end up being dismissed as lightweights within the totality of his works (68-69). It is because of this that Shakespeare's comedies have not received the attention awarded to his other works."
Shakespearean Comedies: Defining Gender Limitations (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Shakespearean-Comedies-Defining-Gender-Limitations/59456
"Shakespearean Comedies: Defining Gender Limitations" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Shakespearean-Comedies-Defining-Gender-Limitations/59456>