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Examples Of Lady Macbeth's Mental Illnesses

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On the other hand, scholars have made numerous arguments against Lady Macbeth’s portrayal supporting that women can have mental illnesses; for example, Lady Macbeth can be interpreted to be a witch or scholars have concluded that Lady Macbeth’s symptoms fall into the stereotypes of women with hysteria common at the time. According to the laws in Shakespeare’s time, Lady Macbeth was a witch because a person could be tried as a witch for simply trying to invoke spirits whether it worked or not, which Lady Macbeth did when she called on the spirits to help her be evil (Levin 39). Additionally, the witches and Lady Macbeth function similarly in the text, both having large influences on Macbeth’s actions. More generally, traditionally witches go …show more content…

In Macbeth, Lady Macbeth shows signs of madness and villainy, but despite these dark qualities, Shakespeare provides more depth to her character, informing readers as to her motivations and other aspects of her identity than simply being mad. In Act One, the reader’s first impression of Lady Macbeth is that of a crazed, evil woman whose ambition pushes her to go to any lengths to succeed, hinting to her madness since the start; by the end of the play, she has began to sleepwalk, obsess over her past wrongdoings, and compulsively wash her hands, symptoms which also lead to her death. However, in the midst of her madness, details exposing a more relatable, human side of Lady Macbeth force readers or viewers to accept her as a person rather than simply as a demonic monster. For example, she implies having felt love for another being or understanding feeling love towards another person when she tells Macbeth that she has “given suck, and know/ How tender ‘tis to love the babe that milks [her]” (1.7.?). Immediately following she says that if she had promised Macbeth she would do so, she would have killed the child she loved, juxtaposing the notion of human kindness with another example of her focused, almost psychopathic ambition. Lady Macbeth must understand and …show more content…

Today in modern literature, mental illness is generally approached in much the same way, through complex analyses of the individual (Anson ?), which shows that Shakespeare described characters in a manner hundreds of years ahead of his time. The portrayal of Lady Macbeth onstage has changed as times have changed as well, and starting in the mid-1700s, instead of simply villainizing her, actors have tried to humanize her, often portraying her as womanly and a good wife though misguided (Macmillan 125). Sarah Siddons, one of the most famous historical Lady Macbeths wrote in a memoir that “in this astonishing creature one sees a woman in whose bosom the passion of ambition has almost obliterated all the characteristics of human nature” (Macmillan 123), and describes the character as “even fragile” (Macmillan 123). By emphasizing other components of Lady Macbeth’s character besides her mental faculties, stage productions further the portrayal of Lady Macbeth as a complete person who once behaved in the confines of human nature but has been misguided. Additionally, Lady Macbeth’s character has had a positive impact on the public perceptions of mental illness because through the act of

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