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First and Last Name Mrs. Queiros ENG ___/ Period Assignment Name Date Exploratory Essay: Feminism in Macbeth and Things Fall Apart The feminist movement in America has failed. In what has proven to be the most counter productive movement in recent memory, feminists have done harm to those they swore to protect. The core of their problem stems from their solution. They attempted to equalize through segregation. Women now have their own sports leagues, softball provides a baseball simulation that is designed primarily for women only, and now a woman could never play professional baseball because they have their own safe haven, softball. They believe by making organizations that seclude men, they have equalized gender roles in our country. Unfortunately for women, this strategy has completely backfired, and men and women have never been further apart. The feminists main redeemable quality however is that their intentions are certainly just, its a proven fact women are treated worse than men in the workplace, at school, or almost any other social convention. And according to most people women cant even escape scrutiny in literature. Literature is often too guilty of depicting women as inferior, and according to many people, two of the main culprits are William Shakespeare and Chiua Achebe. Yet by others, these men are hailed as freedom fighters for womens rights. So which is it? Are these men guilty of social injustice, or did they understand equal rights better than the feminists themselves? First we examine Shakespeare, and specifically his classic play Macbeth. Macbeth has often come under fire for being sexist, partly for the fact that there are almost no female characters, except of course, for Lady Macbeth. But she in and of itself is what is considered the problem, Lady Macbeth is as masculine as a women can get. She fits the exact stereotype of what we consider to be a man. She is strong-willed, cunning, courageous, conniving, everything a man could ever aspire to be. It seems that Shakespeare only added this woman because it made sense to the plot, and then made her as masculine, as any of the other leading players. The second problem lies within the other minor female characters, the witches. They cant even be really considered women, they are more demon then they are human. The entire significance of the witches is to derails and cause chaos in the lives of the men at the play, they possess none of

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the nurturing or comforting qualities women are known for. To summarize, the specific problem people have with sexism in Macbeth is that all the female characters are either evil or extremely masculine, a true women is never really represented. But in a way, providing no real female characters is the most pro-feminism thing Shakespeare could have done. Shakespeare shatters the perception of a woman by making the most powerful character in the play a woman. Lady Macbeth has no stereotypical female qualities, but her husband, Macbeth, portrays many of them. Macbeth fulfills the stereotype of a weak fragile woman. He is cowardly, easily deceived, corruptible and controllable. Through role reversal Shakespeare puts the woman in the play in the dominant role. I believe this is much more liberating to women than the segregation tactic many groups have taken. It shows that women can have the characteristics of the strongest men, and that they are not bound by their gender, they can excel and exceed in a world run by men, and they can control kings. This isn't the only time Shakespeare uses this tactic, one quick example is in Romeo and Juliet, in which Juliet is the level headed thinker, while Romeo is the passionate love-struck fool. Shakespeare uses role reversals to show that women can be among the strongest of men, and that is much more liberating to women than any softball league. But then how can Achebe be considered a feminist? The women in Things Fall Apart certainly aren't as strong or brave as the women in Macbeth. In fact, all of the women in Achebe's novel are weak. They are fragile, small minded people, that don't do much else besides cook and clean. They are constantly beaten and abused, and they never have any real significant role in the Igbo society. They exemplify the stereotype of women that women's right activists have worked so hard to erase. And there in lies what makes Chiua Achebe such a successful gender equalizer. Achebe ventures boldly into one of women's darkest times. He focuses in directly on the time when women were mistreated the most. A time and place where they had no rights or justice, a time when they were used as tools for labor. Achebe is criticized for portraying women in such a negative light, but it was necessary. He was showing the world how far women have come, and how far they still have to go. Achebe's depiction of women as objects is a celebration of women, it's his way of praising them for how far they have been able to come. We have to understand the mistakes of the past to help shape the future, and the plight of women is shown full force throughout Things Fall Apart and it is Achebe's way of both celebrating women's achievements, and encouraging them to continue to fight for equality.

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So it turns out that, not only do Shakespeare and Achebe sympathize with the female plight, but they improved upon ways to make women equal. Once I established that both men really were feminists I considered writing a paragraph on which of the two is more of a womens rights activist. But I realized it was like comparing apples to oranges, both of their methods are completely different, but at the same time, very beneficial to womens plight. Shakespeare by showing women in powerful positions through role reversal, and Achebe through enlightening women on their dark past by illuminating their dark history. Its understandable that both men have fallen prey to criticisms of sexism, but if one is to look at their writings from a less objective point of view, it can certainly be seen a different way entirely.

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