The Taming of the Shrew (Vol. 55) | Carol Rutter (essay date 1997)

Carol Rutter (essay date 1997)

SOURCE: “Kate, Bianca, Ruth, and Sarah: Playing the Woman's Part in The Taming of the Shrew,” in Shakespeare's Sweet Thunder: Essays on the Early Comedies, edited by Michael J. Collins, University of Delaware Press, 1997, pp. 176-215.

[In the following excerpt, Rutter provides an overview of twentieth-century performances of The Taming of the Shrew, discussing the effects of feminist theory on the interpretations.]

Mess. Your honor's players,
hearing your amendment,
Are come to play a pleasant comedy. …
Sly. Is not a comonty a Christmas
gambold, or a tumbling-trick?
Page. No, my good lord, it is more
pleasing stuff.
Sly. What, household stuff?
Page. It is a kind of history.

(Ind. 2.129-30 and 137-41)

Like Polonius trying to pin down the play at Elsinore, The Taming of the Shrew makes several stabs at fixing its own genre. But while the self-appointed master of...

[The entire page is 14430 words long]

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