Those traditional misogynist texts
by
Bottomfish
11/06/2009, 5:52 AM #
So in Shakespeare's day "Many writers of the time asserted women's inferiority to men. Some drew on the medieval tradition that blamed mankind's fall on Eve, and the same tradition saw the woman as a temptress, sexually insatiable once she had lost her virginity. Others thought of a woman as an incomplete man, lacking the faculty of reason and ability to control her emotions. She was controlled, like the tides, by the fickle moon, as her menstrual cycle showed. Fluidity and excess were qualities often attributed to women in literature...Yet all of this stands against the many intelligent and determined women we find in the plays of the period. And for most of Shakespeare's life the monarch was a woman." (From Shakespeare: The Basics by Sean McEvoy.)
So despite the opinion of the "many writers" the plays of the period did not depict women in the manner indicated, and, as noted, the monarch was female. Apparently I have to go to p.247. Here the writer discusses A Winter's Tale but the lunar stereotype does not appear. He also cites Sir Thomas Elyot but Elyot is saying that woman should be submissive to her husband, not that she is lunar or emotionally volatile. Sometimes women are depicted that way in Shakespeare (Katharina or Cleopatra), but often not. (What about Viola or Isabella? In fact can you say Juliet herself, despite your citation of her, really is a female moon and at the same time point out that she tells Romeo specifically not to be a moon?) McEvoy states "It is too easy, in fact, to see misogyny (hatred of women) as a single simple force running through all of the society of Shakespeare's time."
I can only suppose that these "many writers" did not get much attention even in their time. St. Augustine attributes man's fall to Adam, not Eve. See The City of God.) Although Yeats read widely I'm not sure he was so much influenced by these "many writers", who apparently had little if any influence on Shakespeare depiction of character. Again, can you show that these "traditional misogynist texts" had all that much influence on Yeats?
The real point of your interpretation is how to read the word "shell" and I agree that it certainly is a sea-shell since it is washed by time's waters." Although "labor" can be read as the labor of childbirth I don't think this means for example that Yeats is jealous of women for being able to give birth. To see the shell as female and spend time on Maud Gonne and Yeats' failure to win her hand seems to me pointless because although it tells us about Yeats personally, I don't think it helps to understand the poem.