Women In The Elizabethan Era

595 Words2 Pages

“She is a woman, therefore may be woo'd, She is a woman, therefore may be won, She is Lavinia, therefore must be lov'd” (2.1.6). Demetrius’ obnoxious remark suggests that, since Lavinia is a woman, her sole purpose in life is as a sexual object for men to conquer. This is how many people during Shakespeare’s time thought of women. However, in many of Shakespeare’s writings the females are the dominating characters in the play. Shakespeare’s females, though outsiders in terms of the male-dominated culture in which they live, seem stronger, worthier, more intelligent, more interesting, more attractive in every sense, than the men with whom they are paired. What did it mean to be masculine or feminine in the Elizabethan Era? In Russ

Open Document