ABSTRACT

By examining how female characters speak and act during coming of age, engagement, marriage, and intimacy, Consent in Shakespeare will enhance understanding about how and why women spoke, remained silent, or acted as they did in relation to their intimate partners in Early Modern and contemporary private and public situations in and around the Mediterranean.

Consent in intimate relationships is front and center in today’s conversations. This book re-examines the verbal and physical interactions of female-identified characters in Early Modern and contemporary cultures in Shakespeare’s Mediterranean comedies and the sources from which he derived his plays. This re-examination of the words that women say or do not say, and actions that women do or do not take, in Shakespeare’s Mediterranean plays and his probable sources sheds light on how Shakespeare’s audiences might have perceived Mediterranean cultural mores and norms. Assessment of source materials for Shakespeare’s comedies set in the Balkans, France, Italy, the Near East, North Africa, and Spain suggests how women of diverse backgrounds communicated in everyday life and peak life experiences in the Early Modern era.

Given Shakespeare’s impact worldwide, this initiative to shift the conversation about the power of consent of female protagonists and supporting characters in Shakespeare’s Mediterranean plays will further transform conversations about consent in class, board and conference rooms, and the international stage.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Consent, context, and consequences

chapter 1|13 pages

Commodified Kates

Consent, class, and agency on the marriage market

chapter 2|18 pages

Triangulating The Two Gentlemen

Maids empower gender expression in love

chapter 3|13 pages

The merchants of love

White privilege shades justice

chapter 4|14 pages

Much ado about maidens

Women restore women to society

chapter 5|15 pages

Trussed night

Expressing gender preferred, but not required, in agency

chapter 6|14 pages

Is all well on love's pilgrimage?

Boundary crossings between the sheets

chapter 7|14 pages

Measuring consent

The consequences of “yes,” “no,” and “no, but…”

chapter 8|11 pages

Women around Othello

Status and the race card in intimate partner violence

chapter 9|13 pages

Tempestuous powers

Gendered relations breed agency in an unceded land

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion