"Cliff Notes - Taming of the Shrew, The" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cliff Notes)WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: THE AUTHOR AND HIS TIMES William Shakespeare's life (1564-1616) spanned the end of Queen Elizabeth's reign (1558-1603) and the first half of James I's (1603-1625). It was a very interesting time, with considerable social change and intellectual excitement and a general broadening of the horizons of the English. England had adopted a national Christianity in 1539, when Elizabeth's father, Henry VIII, established the Church of England and threw off allegiance to the Roman Catholic Pope. In 1588, as Shakespeare began to write his first plays, England defeated the great Spanish Armada in the English Channel. London was a bustling center of commerce, politics, and learning, with the Royal Court as the pivotal point. Expeditions to the New World set off almost every year, and the gold of South America was buying silks and satins from China for the English merchants and aristocracy. But, as England moved toward economic supremacy and scientific sophistication, older ideas kept their hold. Most of society still believed in a hierarchical system in which everything and everybody had a fixed place. The world was organized into a series of pyramids--the overarching pyramid had God at its apex. In the political sphere, the sovereign ruled by divine right with subjects in ranks below. In the family, the husband was the equivalent of God to obey their parents in the same order, and the servants were supposed to obey all above them. Yet at the same time Elizabethans were acutely aware that the world did not always conform to this ideal order. In an era when political dissent was still expressed in religious terms, the new religious movement called Puritanism challenged aspects of the established regime. On the other hand, to neighboring Catholic countries England's defiance of the Pope was itself a kind of radical defiance of authority. And some English subjects felt that Elizabeth was not harsh enough on either Catholics or Puritans. One of these, the 2nd Earl of Essex, attempted to overthrow her in 1601. In the name of mounting a more effective defense of "order," this man committed the most extreme offense against the established order, the attempted overthrow of a monarch. Shakespeare was well aware of these tensions and ironies, and his plays express them. In The Taming of the Shrew order is re-established by teaching a wife to obey, yet that disobedient wife is often a more appealing character than the people who are shocked by her behavior. Just as England was expanding its commercial and intellectual horizons, the English language was enjoying a huge expansion of vocabulary, in part from the languages encountered by explorers and merchants. Language was a source of pleasure to the Elizabethans. |
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