Essay On Gender Roles In Macbeth

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Queen Elizabeth I took over rule of England in 1558. Often called “The Virgin Queen” due to her childless and sexless rule thought to help her in grasping a more masculine era. The gender expectations of the time made no exceptions, not even for a queen. Gender rules and values were so prevalent during the rule of Elizabeth I and James I that they seeped their way into every aspect of life, even theatre. The ability for gender identities within plays, such as Macbeth and The Duchess of Malfi, to hold meaning for Jacobean audiences comes from the emphasis that the society places on the role of women. A woman taking on a masculine character represents a contradiction of gender norms. A very clear contradiction to audiences living in this …show more content…

One where the wife devotes herself fully to her husband—waiting on a whim to hear from him—and the husband pursues greater ambitions (15-16). However, Lady Macbeth recognizes her husband’s kind disposition saying that “Hie thee hither, that I may pour my spirits in thine ear, and chastise with the valor of my tongue all that impedes thee” (16). She knows that she must push him to accomplish his greatness. While it might be a supportive wife, it soon becomes clear that Lady Macbeth holds the dominance. In her book Women’s Worlds in Shakespeare’s Plays Irene Dash acknowledges this dominance, but also “Lady Macbeth’s vehement language and extraordinary vows have marked her as the more vicious of the two” (165). The language Dash refers to is the belittling of her husband shortly after he enters from her reading the letter and she says to him, “O, never shall sun that morrow see! Your face, my Thane, is as a book where men may read strange matters. To beguile the time, look like the time; bear welcome in your eye, your hand, your tongue,”(18) and later when she scolds, “When you durst do it, then you were a man; and to be more than what you were, you would be so much more the man” (22). Lady Macbeth takes on the role of the verbal abuser, pushing Macbeth. The vows that Dash mentions concern the removal of the female anatomy, an act of creating

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