Metaphors And Compression In Shakespeare's The Rape Of Lucrece

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Abstract This study examines how language is used to suggest sexual aggression in Shakespeare’s The Rape of Lucrece. Tarquin commits rape because he wants to sexually conquer Lucrece. Such devices as metaphors of violence and other linguistic devicesin the poem are examined for evidence of sexual conquest. The study argues that the kind of language that Tarquin uses reflects his behaviour and actions in significant ways. For example, the language reflects his ideologies and the exercise of power. There are several ways in which the language manifests itself. Examples include figurative language such as imagery and metaphors. The study concludes that the structural metaphor of the poem is crucial to the understanding of rape as the worst form of intrusive crime comparable to the incursion of a territory by foreign forces. Key words: incursion, aggression, phallic, siege, violence. Introduction …show more content…

For example, a ‘football game is war.’ The structural metaphor is supported by conceptual metaphors such as ‘the coach assembled a strong arsenal of eleven men’, and ‘the team attacked its opponents from the flanks.’ The words ‘arsenal’ and ‘attacked’ in the conceptual metaphors above are drawn from military combat. Therefore, their use in the football field is metaphorical. In The Rape of Lucrece, military terms such as ‘siege,’ ‘yield’ and ‘ambush’ are metaphorical. They are used not only to suggest the destructive nature of rape, but also to evoke feelings of repulsion and anger against