Saturday, June 6, 2020
Women in Shakespeare, Taymor, and Atwood The Tempest Reworked - Literature Essay Samples
The practice of theatrically adapting Shakespeareââ¬â¢s works has been popular for close to four hundred years (Fischlin and Fortier 1); the high points of appropriation were the Restoration and the second half of the twentieth century. Recent adaptations often adapt his plays to fit other mediums, such as film or the novel. Fischlin and Fortier remark that ââ¬Å"adaptations . . . often attempt to re-contextualize Shakespeare politicallyâ⬠(5). According to Terence Hawkes, the meaning ascribed to a text at a certain point in time is always ideologically dependent and contextualized by history and occasion; therefore, assigning a final, context-free truth or meaning to it is impossible (1-10). Placing Hawkesââ¬â¢ notion of the dependence of meaning on context in the area of adaptation studies suggests that every adaptation of, in this case, Shakespeare, creates its own meaning by reworking the original text in a new context. Shakespeareââ¬â¢s works lend themselves so we ll for the purpose of adaptation or appropriation because of the gaps he left; his works often exclude motivations or depth of character, making it alluring for adapters to attempt and fill these gaps, often to enforce a certain perspective. In most of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s plays, female characters fall quite flat; their motivations are vague or non-existant, and they seem to exist solely to assist the men in reaching their goals, or act as their motivation. A curious theme seems to be the absence of mothers: ââ¬Å"mothers are conspicuously absent from The Tempest, King Lear, Othello, The Merchant of Venice and Measure for Measure. Even more striking, in the six most celebrated romantic comedies (Loveââ¬â¢s Labourââ¬â¢s Lost, The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Nightââ¬â¢s Dream, As You Like It, Much Ado About Nothing, and Twelfth Night) no mothers appear at allâ⬠(Rose 292). The angle of feminism or gender has been used in many adaptations; Paula Vogelââ¬â¢s Desdemona: A Play About a Handkerchief, for example, re-contextualizes Othello to call attention to the role of women. The main and only characters that deliver dialogue and appear on stage are Desdemona, Emilia and Bianca, female characters that a ppear quite flat in the original play; Desdemona is Othelloââ¬â¢s obedient wife, an upper-class lady; Emilia is her servant who is very loyal to her husband Iago; and Bianca is a prostitute. According to Fischlin and Fortier, ââ¬Å"the society of women . . . is at best a minor element in the Shakespearean originalâ⬠(234). In Vogelââ¬â¢s play, though they occupy the same positions in society, these women are more rounded and dynamic characters; they get to express their wishes and motivations, which are in some regards opposite to those of their namesakes in Shakespeareââ¬â¢s work: Bianca wants to get married and settle down, Emilia is a cunning but naive woman who above all longs to climb the social ladder (even if that would require the death of her husband) and Desdemona fills in for Bianca on Tuesday nights, enjoying the freedom of being a prostitute and fantasising about travelling the world.Another example of reworking a Shakespeare play to enforce a feminist pe rspective is Learââ¬â¢s Daughters by Elaine Feinstein and the Womenââ¬â¢s Theatre Group: written as a prequel to the original play, this work attempts to explain why Cordelia opposes her father and Regan and Gonerill turn out to be so wicked, by describing the hardships they faced in their youth at the hands of their malicious father. Placing the blame of their development on King Learââ¬â¢s shoulders, by turning him into an abusive, adulterous man with incestuous tendencies, justifies the future behaviour of his daughters to a certain extent. The women are moved to the foreground of the story and given a background, a more developed personality and clear motivations for their actions. The Tempest, one of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s last plays, tells the story of Prospero, the former Duke of Milan. His brother Antonio envied his position and conspired with Alonso, the King of Naples, to remove Prospero, sending him and his daughter Miranda off to sea on a raft; they survive and end up on a desert island, because of the charity of Gonzalo who brings them supplies and Prosperoââ¬â¢s books of magic. They remain on the island for twelve years, time Prospero uses to enslave both a spirit called Ariel and a native by the name of Caliban. When a boat carrying his enemies and their associates appears in proximity of the island, Prospero raises a tempest to force them off the ship and strategically disperses his enemies and acquaintances over the island in order to execute his complicated plan to get his former position back. The only women that feature in the play are Miranda, Claribel and Sycorax, who are heavily outnumbered by ten males. Furthermore, the latter two of these three women appear only briefly in description, and therefore have no dialogue: Claribel is Alonsoââ¬â¢s daughter, who has recently been married to the Prince of Tunis; the sole purpose of her character is to serve as material for snide remarks towards Alonso for selling out the kingdom, as well as to explain why Alonso, Ferdinand, Sebastian, Antonio, Gonzalo, Stephano, and Trinculo are on a boat in proximity to Prosperoââ¬â¢s island. Sycorax, a malignant witch who was banished to the island, died several years before the story of The Tempest begins. She is Calibanââ¬â¢s mother and imprisoned Ariel in a tree; she serves as a foil character for Prospero, contrasting her dark with his white magic, and functions as a justification for Caliban to claim ownership of the island. Prospero also constantly reminds Ariel of Sycoraxââ¬â¢s cruel treatment to maintain the spiritââ¬â¢s service. Both women exist to motivate and justify the menââ¬â¢s actions; Sycorax also makes Pr ospero and Miranda look good by comparison. Miranda has a more prominent role as the only woman with dialogue. However, she seems to be merely a piece on Prosperoââ¬â¢s political chessboard: ââ¬Å"Like Caliban, Miranda has been colonized and tricked and exists only as mans other side, his denied, abused, and hidden side. She has constantly been the embodiment of a noncultureâ⬠(Feral qtd. in Donaldson 68). Miranda is used by her father to restore his position, by making her and Ferdinand, the Prince of Naples, fall in love: ââ¬Å"His motivation for arranging Ferdinand and Mirandaââ¬â¢s marriage is not arranging for his daughterââ¬â¢s happiness, but for his own safetyâ⬠(Flaherty 146). Even protecting Miranda from being raped by Caliban is not an action performed out of love or care: ââ¬Å"His primary concern as a father is to maintain Mirandaââ¬â¢s virginity intact at all costs. Only thus can he . . . sustain the prize that the desirable groom Ferdinand requ ires in his wifeâ⬠(Sachdev 232). Calibanââ¬â¢s motivation for his attempt at raping Miranda is ââ¬Å"I had peopled else the isle with Calibansâ⬠(1.2.503-4); it seems possessing Miranda equals taking back possession of the Island. Thus, Miranda is established as a submissive territory that can be won or claimed (Flaherty 170). As in many of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s plays, women are not fully-realised characters in The Tempest, ensuring a gap perfect for appropriation. In Julie Taymorââ¬â¢s The Tempest, a 2010 film adaptation of the play, the issue of female underrepresentation is addressed by casting Hellen Mirren as the female Prospera. By changing the protagonistââ¬â¢s gender, the oppression of Prospero/a also symbolizes female oppression and sexism: Prospera, former wife to the Duke of Milan, is accused of killing her husband using witchcraft and removed solely because she is a woman. The translation of The Tempest from paper to screen brings new possibilities for conveying emotions, and the film utilizes this opportunity to stage a new dynamic between Miranda and her parent. Both Propero and Prospera claim ââ¬Å"I have done nothing but in care of thee, my dear one, thee, my daughterâ⬠(1.2.104), but considering the development of the plot Prospero does not seem to come across as genuine. Prosperaââ¬â¢s words seem more credible due to the way she looks at Miranda whilst uttering these words, staring into her daughterââ¬â¢s eye s while touching the nape of her neck (Taymor). Where Prospero mostly treats Miranda as a political object he can use to get what he desires, Prospera seems to harbour genuine affection for her daughter: several times the movie shows her caressing or looking at Miranda affectionately. Taymor states Prospera had her whole life taken away from her because she was a woman (Breznican), and she wants to save her daughter from the same fate. Prosperaââ¬â¢s gender can also be interpreted as a way to make her powers seem even more impressive; a woman trapping a group of men on an island, taking her revenge and succeeding in getting her life back demands more respect than a man doing the same, especially in those times. Arielââ¬â¢s part is not changed; however, the dubious nature of their gender is emphasised by blurring their genitals and showing them with and without breasts at different times. Apart from its radical change concerning Prosperoââ¬â¢s gender, Taymorââ¬â¢s film st ays relatively true to the original play; the dialogue mostly consists of the original lines from the play, and added lines are still in Shakespearean style. The plot undergoes some other changes, but all relatively minor from a feminist perspective: the masque is replaced by Ferdinandââ¬â¢s song, and Prosperoââ¬â¢s epilogue is omitted. Taymorââ¬â¢s adaptation attempts to stay true to the original play in many respects, and the change of gender concerning the protagonist does not carry an intended critical message towards Shakespeare: the director claims I wanted to do it because there are actresses like Helen Mirren who never get to play these fantastic parts because they were not written for women (Breznican). Wanting to give actresses a chance to play male parts can be interpreted as a feminist motive, but it seems it was not Taymorââ¬â¢s direct intention to give the movie itself a feminist undertone. She previously adapted Shakespeareââ¬â¢s Titus Andronicus to the screen in her movie Titus, which implies her appropriations are either a case of idolatry or an attempt to exploit the Bardââ¬â¢s cultural heritage. Margaret Atwoodââ¬â¢s Hag-Seed is far more liberal with the materials borrowed from Shakespeare: the novel is a metafictional work that contains a fictional theatre production of The Tempest as well as a plot that, to a certain extent, mimics the plot of The Tempest. The protagonist, Felix, is a well-known theatre director. His wife died after childbirth and meningitis proved fatal to his three-year old daughter Miranda, but memories of Miranda haunt him daily. Felix is planning a production of The Tempest; however, after an unsuspected act of treachery, he is removed from his position and decides to spend the rest of his life in exile. After twelve years, Felix gets the chance to teach a theatre course at a nearby prison; he takes the job under a false name, and after several years gets the opportunity to take revenge on the men who destroyed his career. Fittingly, a production of The Tempest is used as the trap to snare his enemies in. In both layers of the plot, the figure of M iranda is singled out and elevated by Atwood. Felixââ¬â¢s life outside of the prison theatre, which will be henceforth referred to as the main plot, features no living Miranda; instead, she lingers in his life as a spirit. Felix is consumed by grief; his first attempt at staging The Tempest is motivated by Mirandaââ¬â¢s untimely death: ââ¬Å"right after the funeral . . . heââ¬â¢d plunged himself into The Tempest. It was an evasion . . . but it was also to be a kind of reincarnation. Miranda would become the daughter who had not been lostâ⬠(Atwood 15). Felix plans to play Prospero himself to complete the imagery: at least in the play, heââ¬â¢d be able to protect his daughter. The play becomes an unhealthy obsession for him, for ââ¬Å"inside the charmed bubble he was creating, his Miranda would live againâ⬠(17). As his life in exile progresses Felix starts imagining Miranda as she would be aging, a practice that quickly turns into a half-belief she is actuall y there with him. He starts seeing her and conversing with her, but keeps reminding himself she is not actually real. Having Miranda around in this way is beneficial to Felix: ââ¬Å"she scolded him gently when he didnââ¬â¢t eat enoughâ⬠(46), she warns him not to wear himself out, encourages him to eat more vegetables and he finds in her a conversation partner. By killing her, Atwood paradoxically gives her a greater importance in the story. The affection of Felix or Prospero in the main plot towards Miranda is emphasised. Interestingly, Atwood merges the characters of Ariel and Miranda by making her a spirit. When Felix leaves a copy of The Tempest lying around, Miranda finds it and insists on playing Miranda, but Felix forbids it; when she decides to understudy Ariel, however, he is supportive: ââ¬Å"Sheââ¬â¢s found the one part that will let her blend in seamlessly at rehearsals. Only he will be able to see her, from time to time. Only he will hear her. Sheââ¬â¢ll be invisible to every eyeball else. ââ¬ËMy brave spirit!ââ¬â¢ he criesâ⬠(180). The use of language mimics that of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s play: ââ¬Å"invisible to every eyeball elseâ⬠(1.2.443-4) and ââ¬Å"my brave spirit!â⬠(1.2.326) are literal quotes, both directed at Ariel in the original work. In the performance of the play with the prisoners, Miranda is indeed present, and her voice can be heard by others as well. She prompts her lines and progresses the action. At the end of the novel, Felix realises he has to let go of the past: ââ¬Å"What has he been thinking ââ¬â keeping her tethered to him all this time? Forcing her to do his bidding? How selfish he has been! Yes, he loves her: his dear one, his only child. But he knows what she truly wants, and what he owes her. ââ¬ËTo the elements be free,ââ¬â¢ he says to her. And, finally, she isâ⬠(Atwood 283). Again, a direct quote from the original play is used to set Miranda/Ariel free. Attribu ting Arielââ¬â¢s role ââ¬â which is of crucial importance in Shakespeareââ¬â¢s work ââ¬â to Miranda gives her a bigger and more important part to play in Atwoodââ¬â¢s story. Miranda is placed front and centre as the key motivator of the main plot of the novel, from beginning to end. The metafictional subplot of the novel, the staging of The Tempest by the inmates Felix works with, also features a Miranda. The inmates who are to be the actors are all males, but Felix decides to hire an actress ââ¬â Anne-Marie Greenland, the same he casted for his previous production ââ¬â to play the part. Though there are some doubts about the risk of having a woman perform with convicted inmates, she manages to impress and direct them without trouble. Again, Felix casts himself in the role of Prospero. Anne-Marie has a prominent role in organising the play, she helps Felix with costumes, props, and inspires the inmates to give it their all: she even helps the people working on Caliban to add their own rap performance to the play. She seems to be the added link between Felix and the inmates, Prospero and the others, who ensures everything runs smoothly. Atwood ââ¬Å"has consistently named [Shakespeare] as one of the most important influences on her own workâ⬠(book jacket), and writes ââ¬Å"The Tempest is especially intriguing because of the many questions it leaves unansweredâ⬠(book jacket). This adaptation, then, seems to be a modern, complicated version of the original play, written with a sense of idolatry, which attempts to fill gaps that Shakespeare left. Prosperoââ¬â¢s attitude towards, and treatment of, Miranda is addressed in both of these adaptations, but in vastly different ways: Taymor leaves most of the original content of The Tempest intact, whereas Atwood reshapes the entire story and plot into a metafictional novel. From a feminist angle, both emphasize the dysfunctional relationship between Prospero and Miranda; by changing the gender of the main character and utilising the medium of film, Taymor creates a closer bond between parent and daughter, as well as adding a strong female character to a plot that previously did not prominently feature one. Atwood gives Miranda a more prominent role plot-wise, though she is absent physically, and enhances her role and influence by merging her character with that of Ariel. In the metafictional subplot, Miranda becomes a strong, influential female that influences the actions of the men, much like Prospera in Taymorââ¬â¢s film. The adaptations use different mediums but can both be seen as incorporating a feminist note in their characters, filling the gap Shakespeare left with the underrepresentation of women. Works Cited Atwood, Margaret. Hag-Seed. London: Vintage, 2016. Print. Book jacket. Margaret Atwood, Hag-Seed. London: Vintage, 2016. Print. Breznican, Anthony. ââ¬Å"First look: Helen Mirren in lead role in Julie Taymors Tempestâ⬠. USA Today. 5 July 2010. Web. 9 Nov. 2016. Donaldson, Laura E. ââ¬Å"Review: The Miranda Complex: Colonialism and the Question of Feminist Readingâ⬠Diacritics 18.3 (1988), 65-77. Web. 7 Nov. 2016. Feinstein, Elaine and the Womenââ¬â¢s Theatre Group. Learââ¬â¢s Daughters. Adaptations of Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology of Plays from the Seventeenth Century to the Present. Ed. Daniel Fischlin and Mark Fortier. New York: Routledge, 2000. 215-32. Print. Fischlin, Daniel, and Mark Fortier. General Introduction. Adaptations of Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology of Plays from the Seventeenth Century to the Present. By Fischlin and Fortier. New York: Routledge, 2000. 1-22. Print. Flaherty, Jennifer. ââ¬Å"Chronicles of our time: Feminism and Postcolonialism in Appropriatios of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s Playsâ⬠. Diss. U of North Carolina, 2011. Web. 8 Nov. 2016. Hawkes, Terence. ââ¬Å"By.â⬠Meaning by Shakespeare. London and New York: Routledge, 1992. 1-10. Web. 25 Sept. 2016. Rose, Mary Beth. ââ¬Å"Where are the Mothers in Shakespeare? Options for Gender Representation in the English Renaissanceâ⬠. Shakespeare Quarterly 42.3 (1991), 291-314. Web. 10 Nov. 2016. Sachdev, Rachana. Sycorax in Algiers: Cultural Politics and Gynecology in Early Modern England. A Feminist Companion to Shakespeare. Ed. Dympna Dallaghan. 2nd ed. New Jersey: John Wiley Sons, 2016. 226-42. Web. 7 Nov. 2016. Shakespeare, William. The Tempest. London: Penguin, 2016. Print. The Tempest. Screenplay by Julie Taymor. Dir. Julie Taymor. Disney, 2012. Film. Vogel, Paula. ââ¬Å"Desdemona: A Play About a Handkerchief.â⬠Adaptations of Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology of Plays from the Seventeenth Century to the Present. Ed. Daniel Fischlin and Mark Fortier. New York: Routledge, 2000. 233-54. Print.
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