Abstract

This paper examines how men and women have been conventionally portrayed in gender stereotypes in various genres among different cultures through centuries in world literature, with reference to the classical Shakespearean play Macbeth (1606) by the British playwright William Shakespeare, the Hollywood road movie Thelma and Louise (1991) directed by Ridley Scott and A Doll’s House (1879) written by the Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen. The research will explore the common themes embodied by the notion of gender almost in all literature work in the world which include patriarchy and order, masculinity and femininity, fabrication of identities, and binary opposition with the close textual analysis of the process of self-discovery and empowerment by the female protagonists, Lady Macbeth in Macbeth, Thelma and Louise in Thelma and Louise and Nora in A Doll’s House through the eyes of the male authors, namely playwrights and film director. By comparing the fates of aforementioned female protagonists in the three endings, the actual autonomy that women can take the lead in their life or act outside the normalized gender binaries is further studied. With the analysis of the literary devices and the depiction of the female characters’ psychological change with the visualization of symbols and attires in the texts, the relationship between form and content is also investigated. There is also the discourse analysis on the use of gendered language through soliloquies and dialogues, implication of gender roles in society and culture and the consequences of these females in transcending the gendered roles.

Highlights

  • This study mainly focuses on the original textual analysis of the representation of female characters, with the use of language and different genres of the texts, namely one of the British playwright William

  • Macbeth’s boldness, it is obvious that her rejection to femininity and her internalization that females are always associated with the attributes of human kindness, fertility and nurture reflect of binary opposition of gender assumptions are constantly being reinforced and regulated by institutional forces and social norms

  • Her psychological consciousness to deny female stereotypes further reveals her understanding of manhood equates to power, which is clearly illustrated by her soliloquy again in Act 1

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Summary

Accepted Version

International Journal of Languages, Literature and Linguistics. This version is available at HKUST SPD - Institutional Repository (https://repository.ust.hk/ir). If it is the author's pre-published version, changes introduced as a result of publishing processes such as copy-editing and formatting may not be reflected in this document. For a definitive version of this work, please refer to the published version. Female Protagonists in Macbeth (1606), Thelma and Louise (1991) and A Doll’s House (1879) – Three

Different Genres of Literature across Centuries
LADY MACBETH IN MACBETH
THE WITCHES IN MACBETH
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