The Merchant of Venice: Policy & Possesion by Elaina Montague
I personally am fascinated by Shylock’s demand to uphold the bond, and what the flesh means to him.
In both the Jew of Malta and the Merchant of Venice, there are elements of policy and bonds that seem to shape the Jewish identity for Barabas and Shylock. When digging deeper into these characters, they are very possessive. They own things blindly, like their daughters. The father-daughter relationships seem to have no shared sense of history, or appreciation for individuality. Neither Jew sees his daughter for who she truly is and, as mentioned in class, both Jews talk about and interact with their daughters like they are merely property, props, or currency.
Additionally, Shylock is narrowly driven, beyond reason, for one pound of Antonio’s flesh. This fascinates me. He justifies the trade-off when talking to Solanio and Salerio by reminding them that it is a bond, and a bond must be upheld. Unfortunately for Antonio, the flesh is an aspect of the bond: “let him (Antionio) look unto his bond” (III.i.**). However, Salerio—right-mindedly so—does not understand why Shylock would ever want Antonio’s flesh and blood, and asks him why. The trade between Shylock and Antonio is over the 3,000 duckets, so, if he were really driven to get money. Simply, Shylock would take the money and move on. The law is on his side, and to some extent that matters to Shylock. I can’t help bust ask myself, why on earth would he want flesh? Flesh suggests that there is no desire for a death or termination to occur, directly speaking.
One perspective might say that this is all Shylock knows how to deal with things, simply to quantify them. The flesh is something to own, and he wants it in a very precise amount, similar to money and diamonds. On the other hand, I have a feeling that Shylock is feeling very wronged by his fleeing daughter and, perhaps, is seeking control. Part of me makes me wonders if the flesh symbolizes a relationship lost, the loss of his own flesh and blood, his daughter Jessica. This point is emphasized as he repeats it twice to Solanio and Salerio. Both Jews’ shift in character are marked by the collapse of their father-daughter relationships. Shylock’s language in this scene indicates that he is feeling he lacks control; he describes “my own flesh and blood to rebel!” (III.i.). This sheds light on how he views his daughter. His statements about flesh and blood are really interesting because in reality these things are parts of the body system (that really don’t do much independent from the human body). But here, he gives flesh and blood an intense human-like quality and compares it with those the actions his daughter has taken up. He is personifying an object and is hurting because by defining his daughter as an object, he thought she would never be expected to do him harm.
In my opinion, Shylock loves control and possession because it gives him comfort. I would assume that is why he adheres to the law so much, and why he has managed his money and relationships in a similar fashion. Money and law are manageable, logical, and rather stable (at least in his practice). He transfers this mode of thinking into his daughter’s life, who finds his lack of morality and passion so shameful that she runs away and spends his money in a rather uncontrolled matter, (like on a pet money—which sets him off, too). Later in the scene with Salerio and Solanio, Shylock describes how the flesh will “feed his revenge” (III.i.49–61) and then goes forth in listing all of the injustices Antonio have inflicted upon him because he is a Jew. For him, these injustices were lessons learned; now, he will mistreat people just as he has been mistreated—he sinks to their level, or lower (III.i.50). Furthermore in the jail scene, when Antonio is carried away Shylock reminds Antonio of how he was mistreated when Antonio called him a dog. Then, bond and law is repeated throughout the scene, which makes me question if he has a clear grasp of what he desires to do.
Now, some of the questions I pitch to you are:
Why does Shylock want Antonio’s flesh? Do you agree that there is something else there?
What makes Antonio his target? Do you believe that it is because of the injustices Antonio has inflicted upon Shylock? What may Antonio symbolize?
Some bigger questions I would like to ask is: do you pick up an anti-Semitic reading, or were the writers looking to point out an area for social change through tolerance of these groups? What role does law and policy play into this bigger picture?
Also, this is for your entertainment.
This is a parody of William Shakespeare’s “Merchant of Venice” from Sesame Street’s “Monsterpieces!”. It’s not entire true to the story, however, you can hear echoes of Shylock in Grover’s speech!