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The Merchant of Venice Sources/ Background
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The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Jan 18, 2016

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Page 1: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

The Merchant of Venice

Sources/Background

Page 2: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• First performed in 1597• First published version of play

published in 1600• Merchant is not an original story

by Shakespeare

Page 3: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• Shakespeare almost always borrowed ideas and stories from other sources and improved them

Page 4: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• Immediate source for Merchant is Il Pecorone, an Italian short story that translates “The Idiot”

• Published in Italy in 1558• “Pound of flesh” plot

Page 5: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• Another source is a medieval tale from Gesta Romanorum (Roman Tales), published in London in 1577

• “Casket” plot

Page 6: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• Christopher Marlowe’s Jew of Malta (1589-90) was familiar to Shakespeare

• Idea of Jew having daughter

Page 7: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Sources

• Classical sources: Ovid’s Metamorphoses and Plutarch’s Lives

Page 8: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

History of Jews in England

• Jews allowed to live in England from 1066

• Allowed to practice usury, or money-lending; Christians were not

Page 9: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

History of Jews in England

• Jews became target of government taxations because of their wealth

• At death, Jews’ assets seized by king

• Jews paid Christian church taxes

Page 10: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

History of Jews in England

• In 1290, Jews expelled from England

• Suspicion and bigotry practiced against Jews

• Term “Jew” became a label

Page 11: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

History of Jews in England

• Secretly practicing their faith, some Jews remained in England

Page 12: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Elizabethan Image of Jew

• Moneylenders (“usury”)• Bloodthirsty murderers (Jews

might demand a pound of flesh as repayment for a loan)

Page 13: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Elizabethan Image of Jew

• Rumors of Christian travelers being mutilated by Jews

• Jews accused of spreading Black Death by poisoning water

Page 14: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Elizabethan Image of Jew

• Jews stereotyped as evil, dressed in black cloaks, horned hats

• Jews played as parodies on stage: actors wore bright red wigs and false noses

Page 15: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Usury

• Lending of money and charging interest on its repayment

• Traditionally Jews were money-lenders

• Christianity forbade charging of interest

Page 16: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Usury

• Aristotle: beyond the laws of physics for money to breed money

• Elizabethans condemned usury, yet this didn’t stop them from borrowing money themselves

Page 17: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Women in Patriarchal Society

• In Elizabethan society, fathers controlled the lives of wives and daughters

• Women had subordinate position in Elizabethan England

• Women’s rights were restricted

Page 18: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Women in Patriarchal Society• Defying authority had serious

consequences• Disobedient sons were disinherited;

daughters were confined at home or in convents

• Father-daughter conflict a recurring theme in Shakespeare

Page 19: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Women in Patriarchal Society

• Women’s power limited by rules of inheritance

• Renaissance ideal of women suggested that they should live in quiet obedience to husbands and fathers

Page 20: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Venice and Trade

• England’s role as trading nation grew in late 16th century

• Merchants took greater risks as their wealth grew

Page 21: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Venice, Italy

Page 22: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Venice, Italy

Page 23: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Venice and Trade

• To Elizabethans, Venice was symbol of trade and wealth

• World center for banking• Had great tolerance for different

cultures and minorities

Page 24: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

Gondola and Piazza San Marco

Page 25: The Merchant of Venice Sources/Background Sources First performed in 1597 First published version of play published in 1600 Merchant is not an original.

The Rialto Bridge