Disguise has much to do with appearance, and disguise can, by changing the appearance of things, hide the reality of them. Through disguise of Portia and Nerissa, the play makes a point about gender, suggesting gender identity is in part constructed by clothes, meaning that it is surface rather than the real identity of a person. Disguise (the festival) earlier allows Jessica to escape the house of Shylock. The "reality" of Jessica--if she is really a Jew because she is "at heart" a Gentile--(within the value system of the play) is also tied to appearance vs. reality and the issue of disguise. Does Jewishness disguise a deeper humanity? Can we not see a person as a human being because he is on the outside a Jew? Or does Jewishness (again, in the value system of the play) go through and through a person, so that it is his reality, not just something on the surface. In all of these ways the play uses disguise as a way of considering the difference between who a person appears to be and who she/he really is.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Discuss at least two characteristics of Romanticism in John Keat's poem "Ode toa Nightingale".
The poet in Ode To A Nightingale is an escapist .He escapes through imagination .On his way the bower of the bliss wher the nightingale is ...
-
In the poem 'Laugh and be merry' by John Masefield, the poet examines the theme of living life to the full. He urges us to be cheerf...
-
The meaning of the expression "the way of the world" literally means 'the way people behave or conduct themselves' in this...
-
John Dryden (1631-1700) Alexander Pope (1688-1744) Restoration Period (1660-1688) Augustan Age (1690-1744) John Dryden and Alexander Pope we...
No comments:
Post a Comment