Sunday, January 19, 2020
Defying Male Power in John Websters The Duchess of Malfi Essay
  Ã  Ã   John Webster's play  The Duchess of Malfi is an illustration of the unequal power relations between  the sexes during the sixteenth century. In the play the brothers Ferdinand and  the Cardinal are shown as men who want to control their sister the Duchess by  not letting her remarry. Out of this situation emerges the Duchess who, in spite  of her promise not to marry again (p. 1298), will do the complete opposite, thus  defying male power. Her conversation with Antonio (lines 317-61, pp. 1292-3) is  an example of this because in her speech the Duchess intends to make Antonio  realize that she is against both the conventions of marriage codes and men's  assumptions of women's sexuality.     The Duchess, after she puts her wedding-ring upon Antonio's finger, sets out  to convince him that they have the right to become husband and wife. She tells  him that his lower status should not stop her from marrying him. Being a  Duchess, she argues, she has the power to "raise [him] higher" (line 319). When  Antonio objects to such an "ambition" she even offers him her riches. Thus the  Duc...                    Defying Male Power in John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi Essay    Ã  Ã   John Webster's play  The Duchess of Malfi is an illustration of the unequal power relations between  the sexes during the sixteenth century. In the play the brothers Ferdinand and  the Cardinal are shown as men who want to control their sister the Duchess by  not letting her remarry. Out of this situation emerges the Duchess who, in spite  of her promise not to marry again (p. 1298), will do the complete opposite, thus  defying male power. Her conversation with Antonio (lines 317-61, pp. 1292-3) is  an example of this because in her speech the Duchess intends to make Antonio  realize that she is against both the conventions of marriage codes and men's  assumptions of women's sexuality.     The Duchess, after she puts her wedding-ring upon Antonio's finger, sets out  to convince him that they have the right to become husband and wife. She tells  him that his lower status should not stop her from marrying him. Being a  Duchess, she argues, she has the power to "raise [him] higher" (line 319). When  Antonio objects to such an "ambition" she even offers him her riches. Thus the  Duc...                      
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