Taming of the shrew

Taming of the shrew


The Renaissance Woman

Pablo Picasso once said there are two kinds of women; there are goddesses and doormats. This quote perfectly reflects the outlook of Renaissance women. Shakespeare fully illustrates this in his novel, Taming of The Shrew. By portraying the darker side of the Renaissance life of Elizabethan women, the concept of marriage as a business agreement, and by using animal imagery, Shakepeare demonstrates that the Elizabethan era was not a particularly good time to be a woman.
“I will be master of what is mine own. She is my goods my chattels; she is my house, my household stuff, my field, my barn, my horse, my ox, my ass, my anything,” Petruchio said about his wife Katherine. In this quote Shakespeare clearly expresses that women are men’s chattel (property). In this era, women were not thought of being any better than an ox or a cow. Women were the last on the God’s social scale — politics, and family (house, children, cow, wife). In addition to women being property, women were bonded into forced marriages.
In the Renaissance era, marriage was not about love, but about dowry and dower. The dowry was the wealth or possessions given from the bride’s father to the groom, when married. The dower was the wealth or possession provided to the bride when married. Baptista comments, “I must confess your offer is the best, and let your father make her the assurance, she is your own; else you must pardon...

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