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Author Archives: christopher.lopez
Posts: 3 (archived below)
Comments: 5
A Recurring Theme in Shakespeare- Stealing Sheets
The white sheet bleaching on the hedge,
With heigh the sweet birds, O how they sing!
Doth set my pugging tooth an edge,
The Winter’s Tale, 4.3 5-7
It caused a “death” of sorts in both The Winter’s Tale and Much Ado About Nothing. Troilus is devastated by it in Troilus and Cressida. It creates an instant hatred between two minor characters in Henry V. Though it doesn’t go so far in The Taming of the Shrew, the presence of it is undeniable. Throughout so many of Shakespeare’s plays, the fear of another man “stealing” into your sheets and either taking your woman or making you into a cuckold permeates. Reflecting on the plays we’ve read this semester, I feel as though the discussions we’ve had about them have enlightened me to the world Shakespeare lived in. That being said, I feel as though a key component of Shakespeare’s world seems to be cuckoldry. The fear of cuckoldry seems to be quite universal for men during Elizabethan-Jacobean England, but why? Of course, it’s quite obvious that no one wants to find himself in such a position, but the fear of cuckoldry seems to be capable of driving even kings mad with fear. How much of this fear is exaggerated in Shakespeare’s plays? In a world without paternity tests, I suppose that the idea of giving your life’s earnings away to another man’s son is scary, but why was the distrust for women so prevalent? Maybe it’s a societal thing. Perhaps in today’s society, because gender and role are not as synonymous as they used to be, we just can’t understand it. The Elizabethan-Jacobean sexes had very clear, different roles. Perhaps, because of these differences, they didn’t understand each other the way men and women do today, and this lack of understanding led to fear. Even so, today men and women have more than enough communication issues as things stand. I truly can’t even imagine how things would be if the communication gap between the sexes was even larger. Perhaps we’d drive each other mad.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged cuckoldry, Elizabethan-Jacobean England, shakespeare, The Winter's Tale
Comments Off on A Recurring Theme in Shakespeare- Stealing Sheets
Scene Study-Troilus and Cressida Act 3 Scene 1
http://youtu.be/iuFuZ3VJnKM
Posted in Helen and Paris at Home -- Group 5, Troilus and Cressida
Tagged Helen-Paris, music
3 Comments
The Don Pedro Analysis
Shakespeare creates a parallel between the two couples that dominate this play, and he makes the events surrounding their romances so exciting that it’s easy to forget about a bunch of anomalies that tend to appear. As Claudio despairs at Hero’s supposed unfaithfulness and Benedick admits to loving Beatrice, it seems natural for Don Pedro’s character to take a step back in the plot. After all, it’s not as though he has any sort of love connection in this play.
I think that Don Pedro is homosexual.
Hear me out. The heir of Aragon is unmarried, a most peculiar circumstance even when disregarding everything else. The continuation of noble lineage is essential during this time period for nobles, particularly in light of the fact that everyone has just finished a war. What if Don Pedro had died? Who would have succeeded him? Such questions are addressed and immediately resolved in noble families through arranged marriages. Of course, since we have no idea how old Don Pedro is, his status as an eligible bachelor is far from sufficient to support my suggestion. Perhaps he simply hasn’t had the chance to marry yet. However, other cues from the play allude to this as well.
For example, the play suggests that the young men who have returned from war have a hard time communicating with women. Claudio, despite his apparent fearlessness in battle, cannot summon the courage to admit to Hero how he feels. Benedick, afraid to be made into a cuckold, initially refuses to ever entertain the notion of marriage. Fear, in one way or another, explains why these two young men haven’t gotten married. It should also be observed that despite this fear, both of these men end up overcoming their misgivings, whether through their own actions or through an indirect agent (like how Don Pedro sets up Claudio’s marriage). However, there is no such explanation for why Don Pedro is single, and the play’s silence on this matter is deafening.
There are only two instances where Don Pedro acts like he is interested in women: during the dance (where he pretends to be Claudio, so he can woo Hero) and during a brief interaction with Beatrice (where he offers himself as a husband). While the mask obviously hides his identity from Hero, I don’t think it’s hard to think of the mask as Don Pedro’s heterosexuality. The interaction with Beatrice is strange, to say the least. No matter how you look at it, you can’t help but wonder: how can the Prince of Aragon be so casual about marriage? I mean, has he forgotten that he’s the heir? Beatrice, for all of her beauty, is too lowborn for Don Pedro (something she admits to through her refusal). You can argue that he was just being courteous, and that she recognized his offer as such, but something about the offer is just strange. Perhaps, because he is homosexual, he is only offering so that he can be seen making an offer to a woman, or perhaps he simply does not care which woman will be his wife . You can argue that Beatrice’s beauty implies he’s being quite picky, but he seems to be the only male in the play who doesn’t realize that how Beatrice is. Benedick, for all of his verbal sparring with her, admits to her beauty, and Claudio alludes to it indirectly by saying how Hero is the most beautiful in his eyes. Don Pedro’s lack of comment strikes me as a lack of…interest.
Posted in Gender matters, Much Ado About Nothing
2 Comments