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My Last Duchess: 19th Century Logic About Women 11972 Views


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Description:

Hanging your wife's portrait above your fireplace? Romantic. Hanging it up after you've killed her? Not so much.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:07

My Last Duchess: Nineteenth Century Logic about Women, a la Shmoop

00:11

Ahh, romance.

00:13

Girl meets boy…

00:15

Boy marries girl…

00:16

Girl smiles too much…

00:18

Boy kills girl.

00:19

16th century love was so touching. Robert Browning didn’t write My Last Duchess

00:24

during the Renaissance…

00:25

…instead, he took a creepy old story and gave it new life.

00:29

But maybe he didn’t just do it to make us all super uncomfortable.

00:33

Maybe he wrote the poem because psychopathic woman-hating still wasn’t out of style by

00:37

the 19th century, when he was writing.

00:39

The Duke in “My Last Duchess” is really just taking nineteenth century logic about

00:44

women… to an extreme. In the poem, he’s introducing his friend,

00:48

the Count, to his wife.

00:50

Sorry… a painting of his wife.

00:52

A painting of his dead wife…

00:55

…whom he may or may not have killed for smiling at other men.

00:59

But hey, close enough to the real thing, right? He even says: “there she stands as if alive.”

01:07

Because now she quote unquote “lives” the way he wants her to… no moving, no talking,

01:12

definitely no being nice to other people…

01:15

Now that she’s a painting, he can treat her the way he always wanted to: like a thing

01:18

he owns.

01:20

That’s my last Duchess, he says. You can tell he really sees women as objects…

01:25

…because he’s showing off this painting of his dead wife…

01:29

… to the Count whose daughter could be the newest Duchess.

01:31

So he’s bargaining for a dowry to “buy” his next wife…

01:35

…while casually dropping hints that he may have offed the other one for smiling.

01:40

Not that what he did was cool or anything…

01:44

…but maybe it wasn’t all the Duke’s fault.

01:46

Okay, he’s pretty creepy, but it’s not like he’s the only one here who’s bonkers.

01:50

We don’t hear the count raising any objections.

01:52

He’s there to sell his daughter, period.

01:54

He doesn’t much seem to mind that the buyer is …probably a psycho killer.

01:59

So if women are objects in the Duke’s culture…

02:02

…and in Browning’s culture, too…

02:04

…then is the Duke really that crazy to treat them that way?

02:09

Shmoop amongst yourselves.

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