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Role Of Masculinity In Macbeth

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In William Shakespeare’s tragedy, Macbeth, the protagonist desperately tries to live up to the image of a man that his society portrays. The search for his manhood leads him to violent acts that inevitably get him killed. In this tragedy, male and female roles are constantly discussed and defined. Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth equate masculinity to violence and aggression. They both believe that in order to be a real man, then a man must perform violent acts when necessary. The ideology of masculinity and in this tragedy is that men, at times, need to be violent and aggressive to appease their ambitious nature. The moment that part of the witches’ prophecy became true Macbeth knew he would do anything to assure the rest of the prophecy would also occur. Macbeth knew he would have to perform heinous acts of violence and treason in order to become king, but at the time he did not care because his ambitious nature over took his rationality. When Macbeth finally started to question himself about killing Duncan his wife steps in and questions his masculinity because she knew this would be the only way to accomplish the …show more content…

In this time a man’s masculinity was all that he had and for someone to question it would have almost forced the man to prove himself. In the twenty first century this same idea of being a masculine man still exist. If someone questions a man’s masculinity they most often seek to prove them wrong or prove that they are hyper masculine. In reality Macbeth had no choice to be aggressive because aggression and violence are what identified someone as being a true man, without these traits Macbeth would have been demasculinized. His pride, self-worth, and ambition would not allow that to happen, therefore, to prove himself as a man he killed his friends to meet his own self desires and ended up paying the price for his ambitious

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