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  1. Women in Shakespeare’s England. Elizabethan England was a fiercely patriarchal society with laws that heavily restricted what women could and could not do. Women were not allowed to attend school or university, which meant they couldn’t work in professions like law or medicine. Most of the guilds, which trained skilled workers like ...

  2. Two of Shakespeare’s tragedies begin with the struggle of a young female character to free herself from male control. In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet sneaks out of her home to marry Romeo, and then fakes her own death to escape the husband her father has chosen for her. In Othello, Desdemona also sneaks out at night to marry the man she has ...

    • Cordelia in King Lear. The vain and foolish Lear decides to retire as king and give all his lands and money to his three daughters, their portions based on their declarations of how much they love him.
    • Portia in The Merchant of Venice. Portia is unusual in that, since her father’s death, having no brother, she has had to perform the role of a man and manage the very wealthy estate he has left her.
    • Lady Macbeth in Macbeth. Lady Macbeth is thought of as a very strong woman. She certainly exercises power over her husband, Macbeth, in the first half of the play, as she encourages him to murder Duncan.
    • Juliet in Romeo and Juliet. Juliet would not be thought of as a woman in our time but at just fourteen she is already a commodity which her father, a rich merchant, is preparing to trade for a connection with a noble family.
  3. Shakespeare: Shakespeare's Women. Shakespeare, it is claimed by many modern critics, was a feminist. Shapiro for example goes so far as to claim that Shakespeare was 'the noblest feminist of them all'. Although I am inclined to agree with McLuskie that as Shakespeare 'wrote for a male entertainment', it is historically incorrect to regard him ...

  4. Learn More. “Sonnet 20” is a poem by the Renaissance playwright and poet William Shakespeare. The poem belongs to a sequence of Shakespeare's sonnets addressing an unidentified “fair youth”—a young man for whom the speaker of the poems expresses love and attraction. In this particular sonnet, the speaker praises the fair youth for his ...

  5. Jan 1, 2023 · In Short. In Sonnet 130, Shakespeare depicts his mistress as a dark lady who is deficient in beauty as per society’s standard. She does not have eyes as bright as the sun, rosy cheeks, snow-white breasts etc. She is just like an ordinary human being. But the poet-lover finds her as beautiful as any woman and loves her for who she is.

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  7. www.shakespeare.org.uk › explore-shakespeare › shakeWilliam Shakespeare Biography

    His plays have had an enduring presence on stage and film. His writings have been compiled in various iterations of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, which include all of his plays, sonnets, and other poems. William Shakespeare continues to be one of the most important literary figures of the English language.