Relationships in Shakespeare's Works

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A daughter’s first love is usually her father, an observation Shakespeare heavily relied on as he wrote many of his plays. He successfully mastered the art of explaining the traditional Elizabethan marriage ritual as well as the importance of father-daughter relationships. Although, as Lynda E. Boose author of “The Father and the Bride in Shakespeare” explains, Shakespeare’s creation of many father-daughter relationships and wedding rituals in his plays were not always successful and some tended to distort or make fun of the expectations held by Elizabethan society, especially in the case of Romeo and Juliet where her wedding scene to Romeo violates all aspects of the traditional marriage ceremony.

In Elizabethan times, the traditional marriage ceremony consisted of a wedding held in a church that symbolized the separation of a father and his daughter as well as the transition into the daughter’s newly married life. As Arnold van Gennep states, there are three major “rites of passage” which include “separation, transition, and reincorporation,” (qtd. in Boose 325). First the father ...

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