THE LIBERATING TRANSFORMATION OF FEMALE CHARACTERS IN SHAKESPEARE’S AND DRŽIĆ’S COMEDIES

Violeta Janjatović, Aleksandra Popin

DOI Number
https://doi.org/10.22190/TEME230930025J
First page
445
Last page
459

Abstract


During the time of Queen Elizabeth I, the prevailing belief was that women were intellectually, physically, and morally inferior to men. While some female characters in Shakespeare’s plays conform to the stereotypical image of the era, many others challenge these stereotypes. Influenced by the Renaissance and the portrayal of the queen as a powerful and dominant ruler, Shakespeare depicted women in his plays as intelligent, brave, noble, and not significantly different from men. Independent young women such as Rosalind from As You Like It, or Beatrice from Much Ado About Nothing present a dramatic contrast to characters like Hermia from A Midsummer Night’s Dream or Hero from Much Ado About Nothing. Though not independent in the modern sense of the word, they certainly are independent when compared to the typical women of Shakespeare’s time. This paper will examine how Marin Držić created female characters and whether the Renaissance spirit in Dubrovnik, which changed the lives of all social classes in many ways, also influenced the transformation of female characters in his works. In certain segments of the texts (e.g., Tirena, Skup, Dundo Maroje), a conservative, patriarchal criticism of society, especially aimed at the youth and women, is evident. They are depicted as idle, unintelligent, and obsessed with fashion. However, in Držić’s comedies, when it comes to conditionally liberated female characters, one can encounter fairies, courtesans, women from Kotor, and maidservants. Some of them undergo transformations of identity, which will be explored in terms of motivation and function. In the end, an attempt will be made to conclude the extent to which the cultural spirit of an era could (or could not) influence the liberation of female characters in the works of these two authors.


Keywords

Shakespeare, Držić, female characters, transformation, identity.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Banić-Pajnić, E. (2004). Žena u renesansnoj filozofiji [Woman in Renaissance philosophy]. Prilozi, 59-60, 69-89.

Barker, D., & Kamps, I. (Eds.). (1995). Shakespeare and gender: A history. London, New York:Verso.

Bell, I. (1998). Elizabethan women and the poetry of courtship. New York: CUP.

Čale Feldman, L. (2001). Euridikini osvrti, o rodnim izvedbama u teoriji, folkloru, književnosti i kazalištu [Eurydice's Reflections on Gender Performances in Theory, Folklore, Literature, and Theater] Zagreb: Naklada MD: Centar za ženske studije.

Dreher, D.E. (1986). Domination and Defiance: Fathers and Daughters in Shakespeare. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.

Dinić-Knežević, D. (1974). Položaj žena u Dubrovniku u XIII i XIV веку [The status of women in Dubrovnik in the 13th and 14th centuries]. Beogerad: SANU, posebna izdanja knj. CDLXIX, Odeljenje istorijskih nauka.

Držić, M. (1962). Novela od Stanca. Tirena. Skup. Dundo Maroje [A novella by Stanac. Tyrrhenian. Collection. Dundo Maroje]. Zagreb: Matica hrvatska: Zora.

Držić, M. a. (2017). Tripče de Utolče. Retrieved from https://muzej-marindrzic.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/drzicm_tripcedeutolce.pdf.

Držić, M. b. (2017). Grižula. Retrieved from https://muzej-marindrzic.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/drzicm_grizula.pdf. Pristupljeno 18. 4. 2023.

Fališevac, D. (2003). Žena-autorica i lik žene u hrvatskoj novovjekoj književnoj kulturi (od XVI. do XVIII. Stoljeća [Female Author and the representation of women in Croatian early modern literary culture (from the 16th to the 18th century)]. U S. Botica (Prir.), Zbornik zagrebačke slavističke škole [Proceedings of the of Zagreb school of Slavic studies] (str. 118-137). Zagreb: Filozofski fakultet, Zagrebačka slavistička škola – Hrvatski seminar za strane slaviste.

Fališevac, D. (2013). Jesu li Držićeve žene imale renesansu? [Did Držić's Women experience the Renaissance?]. U Slike starog Dubrovnika: filološke i književnoantropološke studije [Images of old Dubrovnik: philological and literary anthropological studies] (str. 135-204). Zagreb: Matica hrvatska.

Gay, P. (1994). As She Likes It: Shakespeare's Unruly Women. London and New York: Routledge.

Gjurgjan, Lj. I. (2011). Laura – stereotipna kurtizana ili subverzivni lik u komediji Dundo Maroje? [Laura - a stereotypical courtesan or a subversive character in the comedy Dundo Maroje?]. U Umjetnost riječi [The Art of Word] LV, 1-2, (str. 1-14). Zagreb: Hrvatsko filološko društvo.

Janeković Römer, Z. (1994). Rod i grad: Dubrovačka obitelj od XIII do XV stoljeća [Gender and the city: Family of Dubrovnik from the 13th to the 15th century]. Dubrovnik: Zavod za povijesne znanosti Hrvatske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti u Dubrovniku; Zavod za hrvatsku povijest Filozofskog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu.

Kemp, T. D. (2010). Women in the age of Shakespeare. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Press.

Kahn, C. (1981). Man's estate: masculine identity in Shakespeare. Los Angeles, Berkeley: University of California P.

Milošević, D. (2010). O nasilju i pravdi u modernoj kulturi [On violence and justice in modern culture]. Teme, 34(2), 587-600.

Montrose, L. (2013). A Midsummer Night’s Dream and the shaping fantasies of Elizabethan culture: gender, power, form. In R. Wilson, and R. Dutton (Eds.), New Historicism and Renaissance Drama (p. 109-130). New York: Routledge.

Mann, D. (2008). Shakespeare's women: performance and conception. Cambridge: CUP.

Newman, K. (1991). Fashioning femininity and English renaissance. Chicago: University of Chicago P.

Pavlović, D. (1958). Komedija u našoj renesansnoj književnosti [Comedy in our renaissance literature]. U M. Pantić (Prir.), 450 godina od rođenja Marina Držića 1508-1958 [450 years since the birth of Marin Držić 1508-1958] (str. 113-122) Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga.

Petaković, S. (2011). Cvijeta Zuzorić – svetlost renesansnog Dubrovnika [Cvijeta Zuzorić ‒ The light of renaissance Dubrovnik]. Knjiženstvo: časopis za studije književnosti, roda i kulture, 1,32-45.

Rešetar, M. (1958). Kako su se predstavljale Držićeve drame [How Držić’s plays were presented]. U M. Pantić (Prir.), 450 година од рођења Марина Држића 1508-1958 [450 Years since the Birth of Marin Držić 1508-1958] (str. 347-358). Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga.

Švelec, F. (1968). Komički teatar Marina Držića [Comedy Theater of Marin Držić., Zagreb: Matica hrvatska.

Taylor, G., Jowett, J., Bourus, T., & Egan G. (Eds.). (2017). The New Oxford Shakespeare. The Complete Works. Modern Critical Edition. Oxford: OUP




DOI: https://doi.org/10.22190/TEME230930025J

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


© University of Niš, Serbia
Creative Commons licence CC BY-NC-ND
Print ISSN: 0353-7919
Online ISSN: 1820-7804