Beastuality In A Midsummer's Night Dream

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Boehrer is an extremely distinguished author that writes about the beastuality within the play “A midsummer’s night dream”. During this chapter within the book, Boehrer is undermining the significance of beastuality during the elizabethan era. Some of the most prominent instances where we see this idea of beastuality occur is when Boehrer writes, “the result of an ideological identity of interest between locally dissimilar animal transformations all of which are roughly the same moral: turning a woman into an animal degrades the woman, and turning a man into a beast also degrades the woman” (Boehrer 46). This statement by Boehrer signifies how beastuality occurs within the play. No matter what, the woman will always be viewed as degrading or