The%20Merchant%20of%20Venice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The%20Merchant%20of%20Venice

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The Merchant of Venice Comic Harmony . . . Fairy Tale Qualities Simple oppositions with stock characters (ex- the clown) Positive ending . . .or Tragic Dissonance? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20Merchant%20of%20Venice


1
The Merchant of Venice
2
Comic Harmony . . .
  • Fairy Tale Qualities
  • Simple oppositions with stock characters (ex- the
    clown)
  • Positive ending

3
. . .or Tragic Dissonance?
  • Imposing, grand central figure of Shylock
  • Considered Anti-Semitic by some
  • Shades of sexism, racism and implied
    homosexuality
  • Ends with humiliation and mockery

4
About this most controversial of plays
  • Written by Shakespeare - 1596
  • Source Il Pecorone (meaning The Simpleton)
  • No play other than Hamlet has been staged more
    frequently

5
Setting Venice
  • A politically independent state
  • Relaxed sexual morals love of pleasure
  • Tolerance of different nationalities religions
  • A place of great wealth where trade and
    exploration was center

6
Historical Context
  • Shylock, who is Jewish, highlights historical
    contradictions of the time
  • The Jewish race seen as a necessary evil
  • Necessary for trade, capital ventures, and loans
    to the state and to kings for exploration wars

7
. . .but also considered evil
  • They practiced usury (unethical monetary loans),
    which was forbidden
  • They were wrongly blamed for the crucifixion of
    Christ
  • They were seen as foreign, exotic, threatening

8
What about usury?
  • From Latin usus, uti, meaning use a sum paid for
    the USE of money
  • (Interest!!)
  • Against the law of nature for money to beget
    (give rise to) money
  • Biblical injunctions against it (Luke 630-31)
  • Likened to prostitution, another necessary evil

9
Nonetheless, 16th Century Europe desperately
needed this practice of usury
  • It was a time of great exploration and expanding
    trade
  • The growing nation-states and kings were always
    in need of money
  • It was absolutely essential for the growth of a
    capitalistic economy
  • There was a debate raging over usury at the time
    Shakespeare wrote the play

10
The question remains Was Shakespeare
anti-Semitic?
  • His audience probably was, even though they could
    not have known any Jews
  • Jews were expelled from England in 1290 and did
    not return until after Shakespeares day
  • Critics cite the character of Shylock as evidence
    both for and against the proposition
  • Look closely at this portrait by Chandos
  • We will revisit this question!
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