Macbeth's Unacceptable Female Roles
William Shakespeare's tragic play Macbeth scarcely deals women a fair hand; the drama contains only misfit women in the major roles. In fact, the witches are not fully women, with their beards and supernatural aspect. In this essay we will treat on Lady Macbeth, the greatest misfit of them all, in detail, and on other women only incidentally.
A.C. Bradley in Shakespearean Tragedy demonstrates Lady Macbeth's inflexibility of will which enables her to dominate her husband:
Sharing, as we have seen, certain traits with her husband, she is at once clearly distinguished from him by an inflexibility of will, which appears to hold imagination, feeling, and conscience completely in check. [. . .] On the moment of Macbeth's rejoining her, after braving infinite dangers and winning infinite praise, without a syllable on these subjects or a word of affection, she goes straight to her purpose and permits him to speak of nothing else. She takes the superior position and assumes the direction of affairs - appears to assume it even more than she really can, that she may spur him on. (336-37)
Lily B. Campbell in her volume of criticism, Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes: Slaves of Passion,
discusses how strong-willed is Lady Macduff:
Lady Macduff is distinctly of the opinion that her husband fled the land from fear, even without having done anything which should make him fear retribution. To Ross she says:
His flight was madness. When our actions do not,
Our fears do make us traitors.
As Ross argues that she cannot know whether it "was his wisdom or his fear", she very pertinently argues against the wisdom that will make a man fly from the place in which he leaves his wife and children, and she instances the courage of the wren that will make it fight the owl to protect its young ones in proof that Macduff's fear has made him unnatural in his actions.(230)
In Fools of Time: Studies in Shakespearean Tragedy, Northrop Frye shows that a lady is the actual driving force in the play:
That Macbeth is being hurried into a premature act by his wife is a point unlikely to escape the most listless member of the audience, but Macbeth comes to regret the instant of fatal delay in murdering Macduff, and draws the moral that
One issue that is a big factor causing this is stress caused by racism. According to “Can Stress Cause Premature Labor?” By Cherly Bird, RN. Chronic stress is a stressful situation occurs and is not resolved, or reoccurs. The body is not able to cope with the stressful situation and does not return to normal. Studies show that moms with more stress are more likely to go into labor early, so we can say that stress increases a mom's risk of premature labor. When you are stressed the body can react in different ways, either with blood pressure or hormones. Some things that can help control the stress is counseling, talking about how you feel can help. Also, exercising, or complimentary therapies are a good way to help be more relaxed during a pregnancy.
After his initial Cubist period, Picasso moved through various other stages. He experimented with sculpture and still lifes, and by his death at the age of ninety-two, could be considered "the most famous and talked about painter in recent history."
...sprang into action one last time during the decline of his life. In 559, Hun tribes terrorized the city and he was called back into service. He successfully frightened the Huns away despite his lack of men, and then resumed his previous retirement. Belisarius was sent to prison in 562 after being accused of corruption (Mark 1). Justinian decided to pardon him though, and he was soon released and given a position in the Byzantine Court. He was left in peace for three years before being accused of conspiring in a plan to take Justinian’s life (Mark 1). There are many myths about Belisarius’ life in later years, but only one widely believed and popular myth. Many say that Justinian actually had him blinded and he spent his time as a beggar in Constantinople. His wealth and favor was partially restored in 563, and he was left in peace until his death in 565 CE (Mark 1).
As we reach the museum, the exterior was very beautiful. The first things I saw were the bronze statues in the front. We took a couple of pictures in front of them and in front of the Norton Simon. The entrance where the glass doors had sat was very unique and elegant. The glass walls that the glass doors were attached to, added to the elegance and beauty. When I had first walked in, I was very shy, timid, and unwilling to go on, this was due to the more mature audience that I had seen when I had first entered the museum. I was still unsure on how to act in a museum, being this my first time, so I was very calm, cool and reserved, but as time went on I saw college students my age probably doing the same thing I was doing. So I then I felt more at ease. Plus my girlfriend was with me so I was not alone.
Beloved is a novel set in Ohio during 1873, several years after the Civil War. The book centers on characters that struggle to keep their painful recollections of the past at bay. The whole story revolves around issues of race, gender, family relationships and the supernatural, covering two generations and three decades up to the 19th century. Concentrating on events arising from the Fugitive Slave Act of 1856, it describes the consequences of an escape from slavery for Sethe, her children and Paul D. The narrative begins 18 years after Sethe's break for freedom. The women in the house knew it and so did the children...by 1873 Sethe and her daughter Denver were its only victims". The novel is divided into three parts. Each part opens with statements to indicate the progress of the haunting--from the poltergeist to the materialized spirit to the final freeing of both the spirit and Sethe. These parts reflect the progressive of a betrayed child and her desperate mother. Overall symbolizing the gradual acceptance of freedom and the enormous work and continuous struggle that would persist for the next 100 years. Events that occurred prior and during the 18 years of Sethe's freedom are slowly revealed and pieced together throughout the novel. Painfully, Sethe is in need of rebuilding her identity and remembering the past and her origins: "Some things just stay. I used to think it was my rememory. You know. Some things you forget. Other things you never do. But it's not. Places, places, are still there.
To conclude, true happiness results from making differences and changing for the better. Fahrenheit 451 society wasn’t able to accept the fact that to become happy something needed to be done to create a change. Only certain characters in the book were able to overcome the societies idea of happiness and truly become happy. Don’t ignore your feelings and enjoy having free thought; try to make a change to todays society before it’s too late.
An important theme in Herodotus’ histories is that of Religion. The perception we get of Persian religion from Herodotus may be perceived as biased and not entirely truthful and so it is important to dig deeper and study the subject from both the Greek perspective and the non-Greek perspective. According to Herodotus, a possible religious motif might lie behind the reason for the Persian wars with the Greeks’ destruction of the sanctuary of Cybebe (Herodotus 5.101-102). Greek authors have since then created a perception of Persian luxury and decadence and although literature from Herodotus, Ctesias and Xenophon can be quite useful, one must be cautious of their interpretation as the bias in their sources are very evident. I will therefore take a deeper look into the question at hand by examining Persian religion, its origins and ideals, then moving onto the tolerance shown by the Persian kings, their destruction or construction of temples and integration into religions of other cultures. All this will be done whilst examining what Greek sources and non-Greek sources say about the matter.
Women have gained self-esteem, confidence, and self-sufficiency. Reason this has happened is because now women work and back then most women would be stay at home wives now many more women work and have built confidence that they won’t be controlled by their husbands. The female rate has increased throughout the years as well as the growth in the type of violent crimes committed.
Did you know that Anne Hutchinson gave birth to fifteen children? While raising her children and serving as a midwife in her community, she audaciously fought for religious freedom and women’s rights. Because of her differing religious views, Anne Hutchinson was ostracized from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. As one of the first American feminists, she rejected the idea of women’s silence in Church. Anne Hutchinson believed in the Covenant of Grace, which was contrary to the widely accepted Puritan belief of the Covenant of Works. This argument started the Antinomian Controversy, and the controversy almost broke the Massachusetts Bay Colony into pieces. She also held discussions after sermons where the ideas of preachers were praised and criticized, which was something that was also “against the rules”. Anne Marbury Hutchinson’s support and advocacy for religious freedom is comparable to the great Roger Williams, but her bravery and role as a “rejector of the status quo” can be compared to none.
...one’s is more “holy” because of why she committed the crime and how others agreed with her actions. Antigone’s crime is more justified than Brutus’s crime because Antigone helped her brother, whereas Brutus helped a small amount of people, the conspirators. The whole city of Thebes agreed with Antigone’s crime, while the whole city of Rome rebelled against Brutus’s crime. This makes Antigone’s crime more justified since she had more people willing to support her. Therefore, Antigone’s crime is “holier” since she had better reasons for committing it and because others agreed with her actions.
1901: Known as the " Blue period" because of the blue tonality of Picasso’s paintings were a time of frequent change of residence between Barcelona and Paris. During this period he would spend his days in Paris. Studying the master works at the Louvers and his nights enjoying the company of fellow artist at cabarets like the Lapin Agile.
Pablo Picasso was one of the most recognized and popular artist of all time. In Pablo’s paintings and other works of art, he would paint what he was passionate about and you can see his emotions take control throughout his paintings and other works of art. Pablo Picasso works of art include not only paintings but also prints, bronze sculptures, drawings, and ceramics. Picasso was one of the inventors of cubism. ” Les Demoiselles d'Avignon” is one of Picasso famous paintings; this is also one of Pablo’s first pieces of cubism. Picasso went through different phases in his paintings; the blue period, rose period, black period, and cubism. Picasso was a born talented artist, with his dad setting the foundation; Picasso became the famous artist of the twentieth century.
In Macbeth, from the very beginning Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth deliberately trying to suppress her feminine qualities in order to show her power. She was an evil, scheming person whose greed and selfishness was a part of the destruction of her character. Her wicked character has a big impact on her husband, convincing him to kill Duncan.
A year later, using such an early refracting telescope, Galileo Galilei, an Italian physicist and astronomer, noticed the craters and mountains on the moon as well as what was later coined as the Milky Way Galaxy.