Academic Journal

Medea and The Merchant of Venice.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Medea and The Merchant of Venice.
Authors: Hutcheon, Elizabeth
Source: SEL: Studies in English Literature (Johns Hopkins). Spring2020, Vol. 60 Issue 2, p323-345. 23p.
Abstract: In the early modern period, Medea functioned as a microcosm of anxiety about the role of women in the educational process: figured as the frightening mother that schoolboys were invited to abandon in the schoolroom, she also was used there as a rhetorical model. This essay argues that The Merchant of Venice —a play that has more references to the Medea story than any other by Shakespeare—negotiates this apparent contradiction. By providing his marginalized characters with rhetorical prowess, Shakespeare both invests them with power—clearly evident in Portia—and mitigates their threat by rendering it intelligible, as with Shylock. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject Terms: *SHYLOCK (Fictional character), *MOTHERS in literature
Reviews & Products: MERCHANT of Venice, The (Play : Shakespeare), MEDEA (Play : Euripides)
People: SHAKESPEARE, William, 1564-1616
ISSN: 00393657
DOI: 10.1353/sel.2020.0014
Database: Academic Search Index