Womanhood In Lady Macbeth

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The traditional views of a woman in society are to be innocent and look upon as a figure of their husband’s accomplishments. For example, the citizens under Julius Caesar were scared that Cleopatra had charmed Julius by her charisma or courage. In Shakespeare’s play “Macbeth”, Lady Macbeth manipulates Macbeth into achieving her own quest for power.
Robert Kimbrough acknowledges the barrier between manhood and womanhood in his article “Macbeth: Prisoner of Gender”. Kimbrough validates that “Shakespeare sensed that as long as the barrier remains exclusively man or woman, that we are restricted”. This statement truly demonstrates that society denies these characteristics from a breakthrough in humanity. Once Lady Macbeth hears the witches’ prophecy for Macbeth, she proclaims out loud, “Come you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here, and fill me, top-full of direst cruelty (I.vi.41)”. Lady Macbeth wants the strength of a man to do such a crime. However, Macbeth is seen as a “man” in society, yet his conscience is making him more of a woman when he told Lady Macbeth “We will proceed no further in this …show more content…

Fanger’s statement completely exposes why Lady Macbeth satirizes Macbeth into murdering King Duncan, which leads Macbeth in the violent battle to become king. During Macbeth’s soliloquy about killing King Duncan, Lady Macbeth ridicules Macbeth’s lack of determination when she says “As thou art in desire (I.vii.41-44)”. Macbeth’s conscience is conquered by Lady Macbeth’s constant bantering of questioning his “manhood”. Kimbrough seen their relationship seen Macbeth and Lady Macbeth relationship being more based on “mutuality and sharing”. That statement is only partially true, but Lady Macbeth is using Macbeth’s ambition and willing to kill King Duncan as a start into attaining and maintaining her power over

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