Saturday, June 27, 2020
Disgust, Lust, and Beasts with Breasts The Portrayal of Females in Early Modern Literature - Literature Essay Samples
The literature of the English Renaissance demonstrates a remarkable range of attitudes towards women. While there are significant proclamations of chivalric attitudes towards women such as Walter Raleighs devotion to Queen Elizabeth I, nearly divine descriptions of love and fidelity such as John Donnes poetry, and even rails against negative portrayals of women such as Rachel Speghts ââ¬Å"A Muzzle for Melastomusâ⬠much of the literature is steeped in warped attitudes that border on misogyny. Edmund Spensers The Faerie Queene, Christopher Marlowes The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, and John Miltons Paradise Lost tend to equate women with sin, evil, and lust and portray such attitudes by presenting monstrous entities and beasts as female. While acknowledging that Early Modern England was a patriarchal society, it is perhaps simplistic to say that the portrayal of women as monsters, beasts, and devils is based on misogyny grown out of such a society. As critic Tim Reinke-Wi lliams observes, ââ¬Å"equating misogyny with patriarchy is misleading, not least because the latter term carries such diffuse meaningsâ⬠(325). There are other possible explanations for the anti-female bent present in Early Modern Literature. In ââ¬Å"The Devils Gateway: Womens Bodies and the Earthly Paradiseâ⬠Page Ann Du Bois points out that the attitudes towards women ââ¬Å"drawson a long tradition of Biblical, classical, and medieval misogynyâ⬠(Du Bois 45). Du Bois also posits that some of the distaste shown for women in Early Modern Literature is premised on the concern for womens supposed ability to change their forms through witchcraft. ââ¬Å"Fear of womens power increased in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuriesâ⬠(Du Bois 44) partly due to an increase in ââ¬Å"witch-hunting [and] the wide-spread belief in witches, even among scholarsâ⬠(Du Bois 44). It is also possible that Henry VIIIs penchant to behead wives for his own personal reasons promoted the ââ¬Å"disposabilityâ⬠of women. The long and fairly successful reign of Queen Elizabeth I, particularly as an unmarried woman, may have created fear about mans place in the world. The shifting religious environment may have also played a role as the push-pull of Catholicism and Protestantism may have underscored the role Eve played in original sin and called into question the venerated and non-venerated role of Mary as the mother of Christ. Spensers The Faerie Queene presents some horrible beasts as female. The first foe that Redcrosse meets is the dragon Errours. Errours is ââ¬Å"Halfe a serpent halfe womans shape lothsom, filthie, foule, and full of vile disdaine.â⬠(Spenser 1.1.14). The text goes on to describe her as over-breeding with ââ¬Å"A thousand yong onesâ⬠(1.1.15) and with a corruption of female anatomy. Her breasts are described as ââ¬Å"poisonous dugs, each one / Of sundry shapes, yet all ill favoredâ⬠(1.1.15). The unveiling of Fi dessa to reveal Duessa involves ââ¬Å"strip[ping] her nakedâ⬠(1.8.46). Her unveiling reveals her to be ââ¬Å"a loathly, wrinckled hag, ill fauoured, old, bald. overgrowne with scurfe and filthy scaldwrizled [and] scabbyâ⬠(1.8.47). Again Spenser describes her as having corrupt female anatomy that would be ââ¬Å"loathd [by] all womankindâ⬠(1.8.47). Her breasts are ââ¬Å"dried dugs, like bladders lacking wind [that] Hong downeâ⬠(1.8.47) and leak ââ¬Å"filthy matterâ⬠(1.8.47). Her genitalia is called ââ¬Å"Her neather parts [and are] misshapen, monstrous (1.2.41). She is also noted as being part animal having a tail of a fox and mismatched feet of an eagle and a bear. Some versions of Christopher Marlows The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus include a scene where Lucifer shows Faustus the Seven Deadly Sins. Intriguingly only one of the Seven Deadly Sins is identified by gender. The one exception is Lechery who is female even as Doctor Faustus addres ses her as ââ¬Å"Mistress Minxâ⬠(Marlowe 5.324). In keeping with her identity, Lechery describes herself as ââ¬Å"one that loves an inch of raw mutton better than an ell of fried stock-fishâ⬠(5.325-27) saying that she prefers sex to food. Later, when Faustus asks for a wife, Mephistopheles brings in ââ¬Å"a devil dressed like a womanâ⬠(5.145). Faustus is disgusted, however, and says, ââ¬Å"A plague on her for a hot whoreâ⬠(5.147) still referring to the false woman as a ââ¬Å"herâ⬠when it might be more appropriate to call the devil an ââ¬Å"itâ⬠. John Miltons Paradise Lost also includes beasts as female while tying them to sin, evil, and lust. Lucifer, coming upon the gates of Hell, encounters a creature acting as gatekeeper. The creature is described as ââ¬Å"one [that] seemed woman to the waist, and fair, But ended foul in many a scaly fold, Voluminous and vastââ¬âa serpent armedâ⬠(Milton 2.650-52). Like Spensers Errours, this be ast also has a problem with over-breeding as her young are numerous ââ¬Å"hellhoundsâ⬠(2.654). The female beast is named Sin. Although Lucifer claims to be unfamiliar with Sin and calls the sight of her ââ¬Å"detestableâ⬠(2.745), he is apparently her father. Lucifer had raped his own daughter, Sin, and she bears a child named Death, who also repeatedly rapes her. Also disturbing is Sins desire to rule with Lucifer, despite the rape and ensuing consequences, as his ââ¬Å"daughter and darlingâ⬠(2.870). It is interesting to note that two of the three works discussed here, The Faerie Queene and Paradise Lost, have beasts that are described as part serpent. The serpent is traditionally a metaphor for the devil based on the biblical story of Genesis when the Devil takes the form of a serpent to convince Eve to eat from the Tree of Knowledge (King James Bible, Gen. 3.3). Indeed, the story of Genesis as retold in Paradise Lost, also has Lucifer in the form of a Serpent. In describing Errours and Sin as half serpent, the ââ¬Å"womenâ⬠are not only monsters they are also half-devil. Granted, the works discussed here are rife with allegory, symbolism, and metaphor and each layer of meaning has different implications. The portrayal of women in perverted form is often part of a greater allusion or metaphor. In ââ¬Å"Fleshly Embodiments: Early Modern Monsters, Victorian Freaks, and Twentieth-Century Affective Spectatorshipâ⬠Sarah Orning suggests that ââ¬Å"individual monstrous bodies [allude] to unbalanced, corrupt state bodies [and that] one monstrous body [alludes to] the sins of the state and its religious affiliationsâ⬠(Orning 36). But at some point one must see the words for what they are, and the words identify sin and lust as monsters and, often, those monsters are female.There are, as mentioned earlier, works of Early Modern Literature that portray women, at least certain women, with esteem and sensitivity. There are also ot hers that portray women as lecherous and conniving or useless and mindless without making them monsters. A modern reader can at least chuckle over remarks that bemoan the lustful nature of women a complaint so completely opposite to those of modern American men. While this essay is fairly narrow in its examination of only three works, a perusal of summaries of other works of the era reveals that these cases are not isolated in their depiction of women as beasts with breasts. Making women out to be monsters, devils, or the embodiment of sin makes women not only inferior, but worthy of disrespect and abuse. The presentation of such misogynistic ideas in Early Modern literature may have built the base for chauvinism that took centuries to overcome. Works CitedDu Bois, Page Ann. ââ¬Å"The Devils Gateway: Womens Bodies and the Earthly Paradise.â⬠Womens Studies 7.3 (1980): 43. Historical Abstracts. Web. 4 Mar. 2013.King James Bible. BibleGateway.com.Marlowe, Christopher. The Tragic al History of Doctor Faustus. The Norton Anthology: English Literature: The Sixteenth Century/ The Early Seventeenth Century. 9th ed. Vol. B. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New York: Norton, 2012. 777-984. Print. Milton, John. Paradise Lost. The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus. The Norton Anthology: English Literature: The Sixteenth Century/ The Early Seventeenth Century. 9th ed. Vol. B. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New York: Norton, 2012. 1128-1165. Print. Orning, Sarah. Fleshly Embodiments: Early Modern Monsters, Victorian Freaks, and Twentieth-Century Affective Spectatorship. (2012): OAIster. Web. 5 Mar. 2013.Reinke-Williams, Tim. ââ¬Å"Misogyny, Jest-Books and Male Youth Culture in Seventeenth-Century England.â⬠Gender History 21.2 (2009): 324-339. Academic Search Complete. Web. 5 Mar. 2013.Speght, Rachel. ââ¬Å"A Muzzle for Melastomus.â⬠The Norton Anthology: English Literature: The Sixteenth Century/ The Early Seventeenth Century. 9th ed. Vol. B. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. N ew York: Norton, 2012. 1652-1654. Print.Spenser, Edmund. The Faerie Queene. The Norton Anthology: English Literature: The Sixteenth Century/ The Early Seventeenth Century. 9th ed. Vol. B. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New York: Norton, 2012. 1945- 2175. Print.
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