gender

Cards (62)

  • Gender roles

    An important theme within Romeo and Juliet as it contributes to the characters and their development
  • The play is set in a patriarchal society which was oppressive to women, but men also had their own social rules that they had to follow
  • Masculinity
    • A key theme in Romeo and Juliet as it dictates the way in which the male characters behave towards each other and the female characters
  • The feud between the Montagues and Capulets has been manipulated into something based on male pride, with no side willing to back down to create peace
  • Male conflict and violence

    Pervades the play
  • Hegemonic masculinity

    The idea that male dominance is established through the submission of women as well as the excursion of their aggression
  • Sampson: '"women, being the weaker vessels, are ever thrust to the wall: therefore I will push Montague's men from the wall, and thrust his maids to the wall"'
  • Sampson's crude language and sexual imagery is suggestive of rape, as he feels he has the right to do this because women are the "weaker vessels"
  • Shakespeare uses the biblical allusion of women being the "weaker vessels" ironically, as Sampson uses it as a reason to take advantage of women rather than a reason to be kind
  • The concept of masculinity has evolved from being about honour to just a show of violence and aggression
  • Romeo's masculinity
    The audience never gets to see his natural disposition, only when he is suffering from being lovesick or madly in love, making him an effeminate character
  • Shakespeare's portrayal of Romeo
    Juxtaposes the hypermasculinity shown by Tybalt and Sampson in the opening scene
  • Petrarchan lover
    A man suffering from unrequited love, who is often melodramatic about their rejection and goes into a state of depression
  • Romeo struggles with his masculinity throughout the play, influenced by external factors such as other characters
  • Romeo's relationships with women
    Affect his masculinity, as shown when the Friar tells him his tears are "womanish"
  • Romeo: '"O sweet Juliet,/Thy beauty hath made me effeminate,/And in my temper softened valor's steel!"'
  • Romeo's transformation

    From a Petrarchan lover to someone who allows rage to guide his actions after Mercutio's death, regaining his masculinity through murder and revenge
  • The death of Mercutio and Tybalt may have caused Romeo to recalculate what was important to him, suggesting that anger, violence and aggression are just a part of what it meant to be a man
  • While the male characters struggle with masculinity, the women are also restricted by their role as women within Elizabethan society
  • Marriage
    • During the Elizabethan period, women had little control over their own lives and were expected to obey their fathers and then their husbands
  • Possible that this curse is responsible for Romeo's transformation
    An alternative explanation could be that the death caused Romeo to recalculate what was important to him
  • Romeo: '"Thy (Juliet) beauty hath made me effeminate And in my temper softened valor's steel!"'
  • After this experience, Romeo's anger is quenched and he maintains his previous demeanour
  • Shakespeare may be trying to tell the audience that anger, violence and aggression are just a part of what it meant to be a man
  • The male characters struggle to navigate what it is to be a man within the confines of Elizabethan's societal expectations surrounding masculinity
  • The women are also restricted by their role as women within society
  • Marriage
    (in Elizabethan period) often used by important families as a way of making new alliances and spreading their power and influence
  • Daughters were often married off by their fathers who decided on a suitable man for them to marry
  • Lord Capulet: '"But woo her, gentle Paris, get her heart. My will to her consent is but a part."'
  • This implies that Juliet has a choice in who she marries and that if she doesn't like Paris then she won't have to marry him
  • After Tybalt's death Lord Capulet changes his mind and agrees to let Paris marry Juliet
  • Decree
    (used by Lord Capulet) connotations with law and royalty, showing he believes he is a king in his own home and so everything he says goes
  • Lord Capulet's true authoritarian demeanour is revealed when Juliet refuses to marry Paris
  • Lord Capulet: '"Unworthy as she is, that we have wrought So worthy a gentleman to be her bride" "I will drag thee on a hurdle thither. Out, you green sickness, carrion! Out, you baggage!"'
  • The listing of insults used encapsulates her father's lack of respect for his daughter
  • The use of punctuation breaks up Lord Capulet's speech and suggests how emotional and outraged he was at this attempt of insolence
  • In Act 1 Lady Capulet talks about how she fears her daughter, who is only 14, will die unmarried
  • Juliet's mother even comments that she was Juliet's "mother much upon these years" which means that Lady Capulet was already wedded with a child by the time she was Juliet's age
  • Women are not just seen as wives and mothers within the play but they are also perceived by men as sexual objects
  • Mercutio: '"I conjure thee by Rosaline's bright eyes,/By her high forehead and her scarlet lip, /By her fine foot, straight leg, and quivering thigh,"'