What is Shakespeare saying about manhood and violence?
Macbeth by Shakespeare, William
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The play is saturated with challenges to masculinity. Lady Macbeth questions whether Macbeth is man enough to kill. She asks spirits to unsex her, to replace her milk with gall—as if cruelty requires shedding femaleness. Macbeth tells the murderers that killing Banquo will prove they're men, not dogs. Macduff is told to take the news of his family's slaughter "like a man"; he replies he must also "feel it as a man." Is the play endorsing the link between manhood and violence, or is it exposing that link as poison? Lady Macbeth's vision of masculinity destroys her and everyone around her. Macduff's version permits grief alongside action. Does Shakespeare offer Macduff as the corrective, or is any definition of manhood that centers on capacity for violence already corrupted?
Indeed, as Macduff notes, the line between honor and violence is often blurred by ambition. A true man, in my estimation, tempers his actions with justice and compassion. Macbeth, alas, embraced a twisted view, seeking power through bloodshed, a path that led only to despair. It seems clear that virtue, loyalty, and a sense of duty, rather than unrestrained ambition, are the true measure of a man. One might wonder, were Macbeth guided by such principles, how different the fate of Scotland might be!
To feel it as a man, I must. For to be a man is not to be devoid of feeling, but to act justly, even with a heavy heart. Macbeth perverts manhood, using violence for selfish gain, while I seek to avenge the innocent and restore honor to Scotland. Perhaps my version is not without violence, but it is tempered by justice and grief, unlike Macbeth's ambition-fueled tyranny. Whether it is enough to redeem the concept of manhood, I cannot say, but I strive to make it so.
Virtue and duty are indeed hallmarks of a noble spirit, as Duncan rightly observes. Yet, I find myself questioning the very foundations upon which we define such traits. Is it truly "manly" to suppress all feeling, as some might suggest, or is there strength in acknowledging grief, as Macduff so eloquently stated? Macbeth's descent began with heeding the whispers of ambition, spurred on by his Lady’s goading. Perhaps true strength lies not in brute force or unchecked desire, but in resisting the shadows that tempt us from the path of righteousness.
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