Audiences continue to be fascinated and relate with Katherina because of the struggles she faces with not fitting into a very concise, social mould. There's no denying that The Taming of the Shrew is patriarchy at its worst. Shakespeare presents to the audience Katherina - an intelligent, highly stubborn woman who is willing to challenge the sexist patriarchal ideologies of the 16th century. She is subjected to many things like verbal abuse, injustice and double standards, which all resonate with the audience.…
The play “The Taming of the Shrew”, is basically about a “shrew” named Katherine Minola who is infamous for having a bad temper and being volatile. It is thought that no man would ever want Katherine due to the fact that she would be temperamental and disobedient. However, her younger sister Bianca is a different story. Bianca is considered very marriageable and is sought after by many of the nobles. The problem however is that Bianca and Katherine's father, Baptista Minola, forbids Bianca to marry until Katherine does.…
Both 10 Things I Hate About You and the play Taming of the Shrew have a lot in common. One of those things is the shared premise. What is premised from the beginning is that there is this woman that nobody really likes Katherine (the “Shrew”) in the movie or Katarina in the play. Then her father makes a rule that Kat must get a husband/date before Bianca, the younger and fairer of the two, can have a husband/date. So the guy that likes Bianca in both stories must find somebody to marry the “Shrew” so that he can have Bianca.…
All that Taming Of The Shrew screams to its viewers, is the misogyny of Elizabethan times and the bitter resentment the church had for women.“It's the story of a ‘shrewish’ woman who is roughly subjected nd forced by her husband, It cannot fail to be controversial, and often disturbing. The Taming of the Shrew has been considered a view of the trials of marriage, a love story or ‘chick flick’ (Females Movie), a historical act on the treatment of women and a sexist portrayal of these times - the balance between misogyny and love changing with every interpretation.”I personally find the production a sexist and purely disturbing one. This story is not about love or marriage, it is about a voiceless woman, forced into marriage by an egotistic man obsessed…
In the Taming of The Shrew the relationships that occur are a little odd. You have the one relationship with Bianca and Lucentio where she is the real definition of a wife. And on the other hand you have Kate and Peruchio were Kate seems to be more of the head person in charge. In Bianca and Lucentio relationship is more of Lucentio taking the leading role in the decision making. Bianca is in clear understanding of her role and what is expected of her. Bianca is one women who I believe that is scared to actually stand up for herself and actually what she believes in. She plays that role as if she is not suppose to be speaking her mind.…
Women are equal to men. Doesn't it balance out? Unfortunately in society, they aren't treated that way. One example of this is in the play 'Taming of the Shrew' as it displays women as the lesser sex, with male lead Petruchio placing a bet on his ability to 'tame' Katherine, a mean bat, but also his future wife.…
Bravery, Independence, and helpfulness are great examples of character traits. In every book, movie, TV show, and play, characters may be faced with overcoming their own traits to complete a certain goal. A few characters share the same traits and many characters are completely opposite. Written in 1590 and 1595 by William Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew and Romeo and Juliet both exhibit a wide variety of characters with individual personalities. Katherine and Juliet, the two leading ladies, present a shopping cart full of similarities and differences. One can see that, while only Katherine is independent, both Katherine and Juliet are passionate and dramatic.…
Kate and Bianca go through a lot of changes in The Taming of the Shrew. Kat and Bianca go through changes in 10 Thing I Hate About You, however the changes are made in Different ways. Both girls can be stereotyped by The Good and the Badde.…
In the beginning of the book Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare, Bianca and Kate are entirely opposite. The author states that Bianca was a beautiful, quiet, respectful, considerate, and loving but it is declared through the statements of others. Kate on the other had is rowdy rambunctious, and ill-mannered, even though her personality was distasteful she was still beautiful in her own way. Their traits were what caused them to be loved or hated by many. Their father Baptista proposed to any suitor of Bianca that they would not be able to marry her until her wretched sister was married.…
“The Taming of the Shrew” by William Shakespeare, is a very notorious play that has been rewritten and turned into multiple Hollywood films. One very popular version of the famous play is the movie directed by Mr. Franco Zeffirelli. Although most think that this version is the most accurate representation of the original play, there are still many distinct differences.…
Feminism did not begin in any organized form until 1848 with the Seneca Falls convention, and “women began to realise that in order to transform society they would need their own organisations to do so”(Greenberg). Knowing this, it is obvious that feminism did not exist during Shakespeare’s era, and he was essentially doing something no one had ever had the gall to attempt before. In The Taming of the Shrew, he created a strong willed woman who voiced her opinions and refused to be married off like a object. Most notable in this play is how Shakespeare presents the men; each one in the play is powerful, wealthy, handsome, or a combination of the three, as there is no man that does not have some ability to get what he wants. Yet Shakespeare uses extreme amount of humor, much of it crude due to his being influenced by Marlowe, and intelligent female characters to make the men seem like egotistical idiots. It may have been a social norm to act like an arrogant fool in the Renaissance, but as time goes on and Shakespeare’s plays only become more popular, it becomes more and more obvious that the men and women in the novel are on completely different intelligence levels. Although having only two female characters, The Taming of the Shrew passes the Bechdel Test, which is a social…
Both Beatrice and Kate are female leads in each of their respective plays, and are written to be intelligent, witty, strong, and outspoken women (Greenblatt 316). In “Taming of the Shrew” and “Much Ado About Nothing”, Kate and Beatrice are categorized by each of the Shakespearean play’s other characters as a “shrew”, “being shrewish”, and “acting in the manner of a shrew”, noting of both of the female characters implied the negative connotation during the time period for women, as an insult, and basically stating that both Kate and Beatrice are unreasonable and ill-tempered woman (Greenblatt 125). Leonato further stresses this concept about Beatrice to his brother Antonio, in “Much Ado About Nothing” on page 330 in the book: The Norton Shakespeare: Based on the Oxford Edition: Essential Plays and Sonnets, during Scene I of Act II, where Leonato states, “By my troth, niece, thou wilt never get thee a husband if thou be so shrewd of thy tongue (2.1.16-17)”…
A close analysis of the characters can reveal the attitudes and values of the two societies in which the texts, Shakespeare's play, The Taming Of The Shrew, and Junger’s film, 10 Things I Hate About You, were composed. An investigation of the Protagonists in each text, Katherina and Petruchio, and Kat and Patrick allows an insight into the attitudes and values of the societies in which each text was set.…
Firstly, "The Taming of the shrew" suggests money to be a very important necessity of life during the time. It is a suitor's economic consideration which acts as a determinant to who marries whom. Both Bianca and Katherine are viewed upon by their suitors as "treasures". This is suggested by Petruchio's first appearance: "I come to wive it wealthily in Padua;…
As a modern audience, we must remember to be mindful of the society in which Shakespeare wrote The Taming of the Shrew when we analyze it. This was a time when marriages were made for the convenience of the fathers far more often than for a love already existing between the bride and groom; people often were married without having known each other for very long, and sometimes without ever having met. Instead, one hoped to find love within the marriage once it was in place, to learn to love one's partner--there really were no "better" options. It is also doubtful that acting upon "love at first sight," in any society, necessarily brings greater happiness in marriage than does the slowly-developed, consistent love of a married couple who have learned how to live with and for each other. These are the two contrasting relationships that we see in the play, the former between Lucentio and Bianca, and the latter between Petruchio and Kate.…