Sunday, October 13, 2019
Shylock as Helpless Victim in The Merchant of Venice :: Merchant of Venice Essays
Shylock as Helpless Victim in The Merchant of Venice     à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In 1594 the Earl of  Essex, an English Nobleman who lived during the     Elizabethan period in England, was actively involved in the persecution  and     trials of Roderigo Lopez.à   Lopez was a Jew of Portuguese descent, who  was     wrongly accused of attempting to poison the Queen of England.à   Lopez,  being      the Queen's royal physician, was in no position     to defend himself once he was accused.à   Essex, who provided the evidence  also     presided over the trial of Lopez, leaving Lopez little chance of  survival.à   The     innocent Jew was hanged, drawn, and quartered in Tyburn, England for all  to     witness.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The story of Roderigo Lopez is similar to the  story of Shylock, although,     Palmer tells us "It is not suggested that Shakespeare in portraying Shylock,  had     any political or social intentions" ( 112-13).à   Both Jews were placed in  time     where "anti-Semitism was in fashion" (Palmer 113), and both thrown into  court     where they would be tried unjustly. à  The story of Roderigo Lopez sets  the tone     for The Merchant of Venice.à   Lopez' incident occurred in 1594, The  Merchant of     Venice was written only two years later.à   Anti-Semitism was prevalent  during     Shakespeares' time, and therefore we must understand that it was as easy for  him     to make a Jewish man the villain as it would be for us to make a Nazi the     villain.à   à   According to Sylvan Barnet "The Merchant of Venice  [shows] the     broad outline of a comedy (not merely a play with jests, but a play that  ends     happily). . . the villain in the comedy must be entirely villainous, or,  rather,     comically villainous; he cannot for a moment gain the audience's sympathy"  (1).     Shylock has often been portrayed as the villain in The Merchant of  Venice.à   From     being more concerned with his ducats rather than his daughter, to demanding  his     pound of flesh, Shylock fits perfectly into the mold of the villain.à    However,     withà   reference to Barnet's comment "he cannot for a moment gain the  audience's     sympathy" (1), Shylock oversteps the boundaries of his villainous  character.     The audience cannot and would not have rooted for Shylock during  Shakespeare's     lifetime, yet, now we do.à   Shylock is merely a victim of  anti-Semitism.  					    
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