
Women as Heroes in Shakespearean Drama
Author(s) -
Shahab Yar Khan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
map education and humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2744-2373
DOI - 10.53880/2744-2373.2021.1.1.1
Subject(s) - drama , paranoia , authoritarianism , context (archaeology) , literature , psychology , sociology , aesthetics , social psychology , art , history , democracy , law , political science , politics , archaeology , psychotherapist
Shakespeare studies Nature in the context of human behaviour. His drama deals with transformations and he displays these changes on both social and personal levels through alternating the graphic images from characters to situation. In an authoritarian society where lives of women were governed by a belief system which resulted out of Nature’s disposition of preordained roles in society, the portrayal of dominating female voices would have bothered many. Shakespearean drama is a protest against the society which is always dominated by the destructive forces of male paranoia, egocentrism, patriarchal instinct of exploitation of the weak, male sexual anxiety and corrupt abuse of rules of justice by the powerful. A study of the female mind presented in Shakespearean drama is seen at its best in The Winter’s Tale. The following article is an attempt to explore some of the aspects of Womanhood in Shakespearean art.