Gender Inequality in A Midsummer Nights’ Dream

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William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream may feature a number of female characters, but they are often portrayed as lesser to the men in the play. Shakespeare wrote in a time when women could not even act in plays, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream shows many examples of woman not being considered equal to men, and the results of this are not beneficial to the people in the play. Women in his time were seen in many instances as property, and this was not beneficial for them or for society. In fact, restrictions on the rights of women are the reason the main two couples of the play end up having their misadventures in the fairy forest. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is set in Athens, and Shakespeare’s play has many instances of women being placed in a lower social position Athenian in society. Hermia and Helena both have problems because of their role as women who must follow the wishes of men, but even Hippolyta, the Queen of the Amazons, is subject to what a man wants. She is the Theseus’s captive bride, and he says this about her, “Hippolyta, I wooed thee with my sword” (I...

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