Gender and Cross-dressing in the Seventeenth Century: Margaret Cavendish Reads Shakespeare
Abstract
Is there a woman in Shakespeare? This might sound facetious, but it is not so outlandish
in the context of boy actors. Elizabethan drama was after all designed and stagemanaged
by men mostly for men. In this context, is there an “essential” woman on the
stage? In this essay, I examine issues of gender and sexual identity in Shakespeare’s
drama by looking at how one particular woman reader of the seventeenth century,
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, perceived femininity in his plays. In particular,
I look at what can be read as a commentary on the ambivalent ending of Measure
for Measure in her own Convent of Pleasure (1668) to try and offer a contextualized
reflection on notions of gender expectations, and issues of reception.