Comparing The Disappointment And Fantomina

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As any great artists would, Aphra Behn and Eliza Haywood attempt to earnestly depict a problem imposed on them and their era. In both “The Disappointment” and “Fantomina”, the identity of the women and the inclinations natural to them are criminally misunderstood by both the men and the women in the stories. Though fictionalized, the tales express a desperate need felt by the women of the time and throughout history. While the dramatic and overwhelming time of adolescence is merely a bewildering phase for today’s youth, it was once seen by everyone as a dangerous, shameful, life-long struggle. These texts are an expression of solidarity with women, regardless of time or culture, who desire to own their identity as distinct from any imposed upon them. Fantasies are an excellent way to escape the crippling sobriety and boredom of everyday life. Behn choose, however, to put her story of a young man’s impotence into a sort-of romantic, Shakespearian style fantasy …show more content…

To do so, the woman says she must play a character, and then another, and another. She doesn’t even seem to be in control of these actions. “Three or four times did she open her mouth to confess her real quality; but the influence of her ill stars prevented it.” (280) It’s worth noting that in her initial seduction of Beauplasir, she is still playing a character. Not until the very end, if even then, does he get any hint of the true woman. The man is manipulated to the point of inexplicable idiocy. Haywood seems to be expressing that not only do women adamantly desire the attention of men, as Behn expressed, but men are so indifferent to which woman they happen to be giving their attention to that their susceptible to lies of the most painfully obvious

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