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What are the main themes in Aphra Behn's The Rover?
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The main themes in Aphra Behn's The Rover include the relationship between love and marriage, and the limited options available to women. The play explores how marriage was often a social or religious custom rather than an act of love, highlighting Hellena and Willmore's desire to marry for love. Additionally, it addresses women's roles as property and the evolving societal views on prostitution.
One of the play's main themes is the relationship between love and marriage. At the time when Aphra Behn wrote the play—in Restoration England—marriage was largely seen as a social or religious custom, or perhaps a kind of glorified business transaction between aristocratic families. Love seldom, if ever, entered into the equation.
Hellena and Willmore are unusual in this regard in that they want to get married for love. They are both very much free-spirits and always follow their hearts rather than the dictates of established convention. But of course, there are limits to their freedom in such a restrictive society. Though strictly speaking they don't need to express their love through the formal bonds of holy matrimony, they choose to do so anyway. Hellena and Willmore may be free spirits, but they still have to live in society, which means that they must compromise in some way with prevailing standards. In any case, marrying out of love is a sufficiently subversive act in that it shows how it is possible to maintain social respectability while still remaining true to your heart.
One of the major themes of "The Rover" is the incredibly limited set of options available to women of the time since they were regarded as property of their fathers until they were married off or sent to a convent and then property of their husbands or the church once they were assigned a role.
Another theme is that of prostitution and the way that it changed throughout the years according to the laws and enforcement of the time. There were times when the practice was almost totally illegal and led to serious penalties and others when it was almost celebrated by the nobility of the time and so very much tolerated elsewhere.
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