Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam" Essay | Essay

This student essay consists of approximately 11 pages of analysis of Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam".

Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam" Essay | Essay

This student essay consists of approximately 11 pages of analysis of Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam".
This section contains 2,969 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Student Essay on Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam"

Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam"

Summary: "The Tragedy of Mariam" by Elizabeth Cary is an example of early poetry by modern women in which the desire is to build a voice for women to speak as individuals in a society filled with heavy-handed patriarchy. Poems like this were important for building acceptable platforms for female self-expression.
`Plays and Poetry by early modern women are primarily concerned with negotiating a position from which women could speak. A concern for ideas of gender, language and silence is, therefore, central, though its expression is sometimes open, sometimes covert.' Discuss with reference to Aemilia Lanyer and / or Elizabeth Cary.

The Tragedy of Mariam focuses on Elizabeth's Cary's desire to develop a platform from which women can speak, thereby offering a fuller understanding of women as individuals. By examining issues of public and private language, Cary shows her interest in female voices. As an early-17th-century female playwright, Cary was described by the Earl of Clarendon as `a lady of a most masculine understanding, allayed with the passions and infirmities of her own sex'. This description could be interpreted as a complement to Cary, although the Earl adheres to the patriarchal boundaries placed upon both men and women...

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This section contains 2,969 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Student Essay on Gender, Language and Silence in "The Tragedy of Mariam"
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