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(Character | Portia | |
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Gender | Female | |
Age Range(s) | Young Adult (20-35) | |
Type of monologue / Character is | Angry, Persuasive, Talking to the audience, Pondering/Pensive | |
Type | Dramatic | |
Period | Contemporary | |
Genre | Drama | |
Description | Portia has her say as if she were feminist. |
Summary
Portia has her say as if she were feminist.
Written by chris wind
Excerpt |
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If I'm the one with the property You'd think I'd be the buyer Not the bought; A lot of faith my father has in me: He distrusts my ability to judge, to discriminate A decision made by chance, A decision inevitably and ultimately irrational, Is preferable to a decision made by me. But no, you say, The decision was not to be by chance But choice, and thus reveal the suitor's character That is, he who chose lead would be wise, To forsake appearance, and realize its irrelevance; True, but you forget the inscription: To choose lead, to choose 'to give and hazard all' Is to my mind not wise, For its foolish risk (all!); Is it not better to choose silver, And 'get what one deserves'? It seems to me a mature perspective; So, to judge by appearance (And thus forsake appearance) Or to judge by words That is the choice. Words have meaning, And unless the words be false or deceiving, Is it not better to judge according to content, Than to judge according to form To substance, rather than pretence? So if it was to be a test of character, 'Twas thus a poor test, For who was to guess what my father intended: The form did contradict the content; And so choice becomes chance, after all. That I am not allowed to choose Is in principle, intolerable, But in practice, just as well For there is really not a one worth choosing: A prince who boasts of his precious Porsche And can fix it himself; The County Palatine, who believes A real man never smiles; Falconbridge, a pin-up boy With a mind as two-dimensional; A Scottish Lord interested in nothing But a good fight; An alcoholic (the duke's nephew, yes); The Prince of Morocco, a blood-thirsty Rambo; And Bassanio, attracted by wealth and beauty, Willing in a moment to sacrifice his wife for his friend. There is not one. If I so despise men, Why did I disguise as one? 'Twas not my choice: Shakespeare (a man) created my costume (And that of Viola and Rosalind), And in his cowardice, he refused to challenge the reality That to be able to interact Without having to defend against Sexual or romantic intentions, One must be male; That to be taken seriously, And to be exempt from compliments that essentially trivialize One must be male; That to be effective at an endeavour Of the intellectual arts, One must be male; That to be dominant, influential, powerful, One must be male In patterns of appearance, behaviour, speech, and thought Patterns of thought? But didn't I put forward The feminine concept of mercy over justice? Didn't care and compassion win over fairness? No, look again: The Duke first pleaded for mercy, not I; My case was won on a technicality, On the letter of the law. (Though it is worth mention That recourse to such a legal loophole Was my last resort.) The masculist mode won out; But this is not surprising in a masculist court. Where there is no challenge, There can be no change. For when the disguise is finally revealed It is not recognized That to be what I was (what I am) One can be female It is recognized only that I am female. And their response concerns only themselves Relief, that they won't be cuckolds. |