Kate’s Ovidian metamorphosis in Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew”

Autori

  • Beatrice Righetti Università di Padova

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6093/sigma.v0i6.9503

Parole chiave:

Shakespeare, Ovid, metamorphosis, reception studies, The Taming of the Shrew

Abstract

Ovid’s influence on Shakespeare’s production has been recognized ever since 1598, when Francis Meres linked the two authors in his rhetorical exercise “A Comparative Discourse of our English Poets with the Greeke, Latine, and Italian Poets”: “[a]s the soule of Euphorbus was thought to live in Pythagoras: so the sweete wittie soule of Ovid lives in mellifluous and hony-tongued Shakespeare”. The English playwright has often been inspired by Ovidian themes throughout his production; in particular, metamorphosis plays a central role in his dramatic works. This article aims to provide a brief overview of similarities and differences between Ovidian and Shakespearean metamorphoses of female characters’ appearance and voice after being subjected to male violence. In particular, it focuses on the outcome of such transformations and questions whether Shakespeare followed Ovid in staging metamorphoses which change the character’s appearance but leave intact its inner world or whether he pursued a more complete kind of transformation which mutates the character’s emotional and psychological assets too. This qualitative differentiation will be tested in The Taming of the Shrew (1593), a play which offers a wide range of explicit and implicit references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Kate’s transformation from curst shrew to obedient wife in particular will prove useful in understanding whether the metamorphic process affected her inward core and thus diverged from the Ovidian tradition.

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Biografia autore

Beatrice Righetti, Università di Padova

Beatrice Righetti obtained her PhD in Renaissance English Literature at the University of Padua in 2022 with a dissertation entitled ‘This Double Tongue’: Paradoxes and Querelles des Femmes in Shakespeare’s Shrews. Her study focuses on the reception of two century-long literary traditions, namely paradoxical writing and querelle des femmes, in the literary figure of Shakespearean talkative woman, such as Kate (Shr.), Beatrice (Ado) and Emilia (Oth.).
Her main research interests concern Shakespearean and Anglo-Italian studies and female writing in early modern England and Italy. She is a member of the project “From Paradise to Padua: cultural relations between Britain and the Republic of Venice, from John Skelton to James Macpherson” (University of Padova), “Shakespeare’s Narrative Sources: Italian novellas and their European dissemination” (SENS, University of Verona) and of “Classical and Early Modern Paradoxes” (CEMP, University of Verona). These projects allows her to enhance her knowledge of Anglo-Italian literary relations and contribute to the creation of open access archives of digitalized editions of early modern literary works.

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Pubblicato

2022-11-28

Come citare

Righetti, B. (2022). Kate’s Ovidian metamorphosis in Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew”. SigMa - Rivista Di Letterature Comparate, Teatro E Arti Dello Spettacolo, (6), 271–287. https://doi.org/10.6093/sigma.v0i6.9503