Precis Critique of Aphra Behn’s ‚The Rover‘

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5,99 

ISBN: 3656460221
ISBN 13: 9783656460220
Autor: Schauer, Mark
Verlag: GRIN Publishing
Umfang: 12 S.
Erscheinungsdatum: 15.07.2013
Auflage: 1/2013
Format: 0.2 x 21 x 14.8
Gewicht: 34 g
Produktform: Kartoniert
Einband: KT
Artikelnummer: 5407976 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

Literature Review from the year 2012 in the subject English - Literature, Works, grade: A, Northern Arizona University, course: English Restoration Literature, language: English, abstract: Anita Pachecos 1998 article Rape and the Female Subject in Aphra Behns The Rover uses the central role which rape plays in struggles to escape patriarchal devaluation by female characters in The Rover as its thesis. (Pacheco 323)Pacheco holds that rape psychology was endemic in the dramatic conventions of the Restoration, and the objectified status of women made rape acutely likely absent the protection of a male protector. (323) Though during this period in history the legal definition of rape was in transition from a property crime against men to a personal crime against a woman, studies show that prosecutions were infrequent and usually against lower class men who violated young upper class girls. (Pacheco 324) The biggest weakness in Pachecos supporting argument is that there was no actual rape in The Rover. A more precise thesis would have been that the nebulous, but ever-present threat of rape buttressed patriarchal dominance: it was from this threat that fathers and brothers achieved the authority to protect, and gallants achieved the authority to protect upper class women from violations from members of the lower class. Of course, the actual possibility of rape was a necessary component of this power, and, as we see in The Rover when Don Pedro is willing to participate in a gang rape of masked Florinda, patriarchal society meant that a man could be both protector and predator. (This is one reason Hellena is not concerned by Willmores attempted rape of her sister on multiple occasions.) Class lines and possession by a suitably high-ranking male is what afforded a woman protection from this threat, though, as Pacheco pointedly observes, none of the male characters, Belvile included, can invariably tell ladies from whores. (Pacheco 333) To this writer, most of the characters in the play are cartoonishly infantile, something that Pacheco doesnt mention in her analysis.

Autorenporträt

MA, English, Northern Arizona University, 2012.

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