Home > Shakespearean Criticism > The Taming of the Shrew (Vol. 55) - Jonathan Hall (essay date 1995)

The Taming of the Shrew (Vol. 55) - Jonathan Hall (essay date 1995)

Jonathan Hall (essay date 1995)

SOURCE: “Ideology and Resistance in The Taming of the Shrew,” in Anxious Pleasures: Shakespearean Comedy and the Nation-State, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1995, pp. 151-69.

[In the excerpt below, Hall discusses Petruchio's manipulation of Kate's self-identity.]

We have already considered the first of Shakespeare's comedies to make a major use of the traditional comic “wooing debate.” In the discussion of Love's Labour's Lost in Chapter 5, I was concerned to relate the euphoric pleasures of wit in that comedy with the underlying political anxieties of the culture of the court, namely its need to reaffirm a commitment to the patriarchal order against the proliferation of signs that it also depends upon. Wit, as a seductive power operating through language, is the site of deep anxieties over the loss of a center, of the self or of the realm.

In the two chapters of this...

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