Saturday, October 26, 2019
The Value of Sex in Romeo and Juliet and Measure for Measure Essay
   Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Renaissance  England often treats female sex and virginity as a commodity. Shakespeare  recognizes this belief system in Measure for Measure and Romeo and Juliet.     In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet's virginity acts as a commodity. However, it is  not her commodity; rather, it belongs to her father. Capulet uses it as a  bartering tool. In act three, scene four, he makes a marriage agreement with  Paris. He says, "Sir Paris, I will make a desperate tender / Of my child's love.  I think she will be ruled / In all respects by me. Nay, more, I doubt it not"  (12-14). The first definition in the Oxford English Dictionary defines tender as  "to offer or advance (a plea, issue, averment; evidence, etc.) in due and formal  terms; spec. to offer (money, etc.) in discharge of debt or liability" (def. 1).  The OED cites Littleton's Tenures in 1544 as an example of this definition: "The  Lorde maye tender a conuenient mariage wythout deperagyng of such an heir  female." Subsequent definitions also define tender as "to make (physically)  tender, soft, or weak" (def. 2d). These definitions prove the ecconomic value of  Juliet's body. Capulet weakens Juliet physica   lly in 3.5 by ordering her to marry  Paris or "beg, starve, die in the streets" (192). In many productions, Capulet  strikes Juliet, emphasizing her "tender" state. He has full control over  Juliet's life and consequently, her body. Her virginity is a bartering tool,  something he can sell on a whim to the highest bidder. Within this system of  arranged marriages, sex functions as a commodity.      Ã       Measure for Measure also speaks to the commodification of sex by highlighting  female virginity, those who are and those who aren't. In this play, female  virginity functions as a...              ...odity, desperately sought after by men. Their commodity places them in a  double bind: "To be sexually active is to be suspect, to be a virgin is to be  desirable and therefore potentially sexually active and potentially suspect.  Either way women lose. Either way they are sexualised" (Macfarlane 78).     Ã       Ã       Works Cited:     Ã       Carlson, Susan. "'Fond Fathers' and Sweet Sisters: Alternative Sexualities in  Measure for Measure." Essays in Literature 16:1 (1989): 13-31.     Ã       MacFarlane, Linda. "Heads You Win Tails I Lose." Critical Survey 5:1 (1993):  77-82.     Ã       Riefer, Marcia. "'Instruments of Some More Mightier Member': The Construction  of Female Power in      Measure for Measure." Shakespeare Quarterly 35:2 (1984): 157-169.     Ã       Shakespeare, William. Measure for Measure. Greenblatt 2021-2090.      ---. Romeo and Juliet. Greenblatt 865-941.                      
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