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Gender Stereotypes In Shakespeare's Macbeth

Decent Essays

In the time that Macbeth the play is set women had almost no rights or respect, their main job was to have children and cook. Even as children, little girls they are told they will grow up only to be limited to the female stereotype; this is repeated through almost every experience they have in their lives and is then turned into a crucial part of their own personality trapping them in that stereotype. Some women are able to avoid these stereotypes but through this play their past and gender overshadows their ambition. Through emotions and actions that were not stereotypical of women in the Middle Ages shown by Lady Macbeth, Shakespeare furnishes Sigmund Freud's idea that everything we do is related to your childhood.

Lady Macbeth takes multiple actions throughout the play that explain how her childhood has affected her. In her monologue about Macbeth’s new prophecy she says “unsex me here, And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full Of direst cruelty” (Shakespeare 1.5. 48). This statement declaring that women cannot be cruel visualizes the time that this play is set in where women are told they have no power. Sigmund Freud believed that “human beings are motivated, even driven, by desires, fears, needs, and conflicts of which they are unaware” (Tyson 14-15). Throughout Lady Macbeth’s childhood her mother is most likely the one that is caring awhile her father was the cruel harsh parent. The stereotypical household would consist of women staying home and

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