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,"'