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Exploring Gender Relations via Shakespeare: Students’ perspectives on Shakespeare’s life


Naomi Nkealah
John Simango

Abstract

In this article, we discuss the application of feminist theory and criticism in the teaching of Shakespeare in higher education institutions  and consider biographical approaches to Shakespeare as instructive for pedagogic engagements with students. We present an analysis  of students’ responses to a short YouTube video about Shakespeare’s life used in a second-year English course for pre-service teachers at  a South African university. The design and implementation of the course was informed by feminist Shakespeare criticism and theory  which challenges the misogynistic attitudes and patriarchal ideologies embedded in Shakespeare’s works, as well as the sexist images of  women appearing in many of his plays and poems. The analysis of students’ responses to Shakespeare’s life reveals that students found  him to be an absent and a fugitive father and husband as well as a misogynist. Students nevertheless expressed sympathy for  Shakespeare, which was neither dismissive nor defensive of his absenteeism and sexism. We argue therefore that the students’  responses echoed feminist interventions that counter the masculinist perspectives dominant in many biographical studies of  Shakespeare. 


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eISSN: 2071-7504
print ISSN: 1011-582X