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The Passionate Shepherd To His Love: Feminist Approach

This document discusses two poems: "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe and "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" by Walter Raleigh. It analyzes them through feminist and historic lenses. It also summarizes the plot of the novel "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, which is set in Nazi Germany. Some key points made are that the nymph in Raleigh's poem rejects the shallow material gifts offered by the shepherd, the novel depicts the suffering of Jews under the Nazis and the risks taken by those who helped hide Jews, like Liesel's foster family, and it explores themes of kindness, literacy and cruelty.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
191 views3 pages

The Passionate Shepherd To His Love: Feminist Approach

This document discusses two poems: "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe and "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" by Walter Raleigh. It analyzes them through feminist and historic lenses. It also summarizes the plot of the novel "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, which is set in Nazi Germany. Some key points made are that the nymph in Raleigh's poem rejects the shallow material gifts offered by the shepherd, the novel depicts the suffering of Jews under the Nazis and the risks taken by those who helped hide Jews, like Liesel's foster family, and it explores themes of kindness, literacy and cruelty.

Uploaded by

Sophia Garcia
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Passionate Shepherd To His Love

Feminist approach

"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" is written by Christopher Marlowe, written in the pastoral tradition
that originated with Theocritus in Greece during the third century B.C. the poem is composed in iambic
tetrameter in six stanzas, and each stanza is composed of two rhyming couplets.
In this poem there is a shepherd trying to convince or seduce a nymph to go with him to the country and be
his love, by giving the nymph all the luxury items the shepherd has. But the nymph declined the shepherd’s
gifts and luxuries. The nymph wanted something more deep than those shallow gifts that the shepherd is
offering.
Not all women want material things.
The tone of Raleigh's poetry is the first thing to show feminism. Although the Shepherd, Marlowe's speaker,
is unmistakably a man, he adopts a distinctly male style in his approach, using promises that grow
increasingly sweeter as they become more fanciful. But because this is a pastoral poem, which in its purest
form depicts simplicity, an orderly state, and a comparison to a different society. The 2 nd and 3rd stanza of
The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd, the nymph emphasizes the transience of time, pleasure, and all other
assets throughout this poem. These joys, as well as hasty decisions and kind words, won't continue
forever. Although the poem's lyrics are lovely, poetic, and pleasant, the concept they convey is anything but
innocent. The Shepherd entices the lady to partake in the hedonistic and materialistic pleasures that his
world has to offer, with concealed sexual and erotic overtones in the invitation. “Come live with me and be
my love," the Shepherd beckoned, but in Raleigh's answer poetry, the Nymph is astute enough to decipher
the subliminal meanings, reject them, and completely reject the Shepherd. The superficiality and
wretchedness of man lies beneath the nice phrases about nature, the forest, and the ideal love that is filled
with all things enjoyable. The Nymph's tone is realistic and highly practical. The 16th century is known for
its rigid social norms, particularly those pertaining to the roles of men and women. Males had a larger role
in society, and even now, they are expected to take care of their partner and, eventually, their family, not
just in terms of their fundamental necessities but also in terms of the hedonistic pleasures life has to offer.
The nymph talks about how everything—time, pleasure, and wealth alike—are transient. These joys, as
well as hasty decisions and kind words, won't continue forever.
This poem combines themes of man, the natural world, and time with passionate love. Youngness does not
continue, love does not always develop, the joys of life do end, and old age is a time of great need, among
other fictitious impossibilities that she presents to illustrate the actual impossibility of her acceding to his
proposals.
The Book Thief
Historic approach

The Book Thief is a book by Markus Zusak and was first published in the United States in 2006. This book,
based on the experiences of Jewish sympathizers in Nazi Germany, was later made into a movie. This is a
young adult historical fiction book is about kindness, cruelty, death, and the power of words.
The novel begins with Liesel and her mother, Paula, and brother, Werner, traveling by train. Her brother
dies on this journey. At the burial, Liesel notices a book left behind by one of the grave diggers, and she
steals it. This begins her journey of book stealing. Eventually Liesel makes it to the Hubermanns’ house
and begins her life with them. She is tormented by recurring nightmares, and her foster father comforts her.
During these long hours together at night, Hans teaches Liesel how to read. One night the Hubermanns are
visited by Max, an escaping Jew. Hans was saved during World War I by Max’s father, and so Max goes in
pursuit of the Hubermanns. They agree to hide him in their basement, an act that obviously puts them in
mortal danger. Worried Hans drew suspicion on the family, Max leaves to protect both himself and the
family. Hans is called into the army as punishment. He returns home, however, after being injured. Before
max’s leaves and go back to the fuhrer, he gave Liesel a blank book to write. This book saves Liesel’s life
because she was in her basement writing in it when a bomb hits and kills Hans, Rosa, and Rudy among
others. Left without her foster parents, Liesel is taken in by the mayor and his wife. She survives the war
and ultimately moves to Australia.
Hitler's prejudiced nationalism, helping Jews was extremely risky in Nazi Germany during World War Two,
however many German civilians and troops helped a Jew in some form during the conflict.
The scene 34:55 in the movie seeing Max knock at the door of Hans and Rosa he was at death’s door,
Hans and Rosa took him in and took care of him hiding him under their basement since Max was a Jew.
This is during World War Two and the Holocaust, when six million Jews were murdered by the Nazis, this
story was set in Germany. Events that directly affect the novel are the German invasion of the Soviet Union
in 1941 and the Allied fire-bombings of Munich, Stuttgart, and the fictional Molching in 1942 and 1943.
Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Nazi party, rose to national power in 1934 and began enforcing his policies of
anti-Semitism and German aggression. In the story, Liesel overhears a Nazi official discussing the Nazi
government and Adolf Hitler's leadership. The Mayor said that everyone will perish, including communists
and Jews. She soon realized that her father had been suspected of being a communist, and she is now
unable to locate him. After she learned to write, she also tried to write to her mother, but no one ever
responded. She came to the conclusion that her mother had passed away. She therefore ascribed Hitler's
actions to the deaths of her parent's and brother's. Either identical reproductions of the Holocaust occurred
in the books, or the events were comparable to everything that actually occurred. Against the Jews and to
demonstrate Nazi superiority over other people, the Holocaust was primarily a religious act. The Book Thief
attempted to depict all the events that took place in Germany during the specified dates of 1939 and 1945
by using locations, occasions, and characters in the novel. The author was motivated to write by the tale he
heard from his parents, many of the events that were depicted in the story were based on real-life
occurrences.
The Book Thief explores a variety of topics, including kindness and love as demonstrated by Liesel and her
foster family, literacy and power as demonstrated by Liesel's discovery of the world of books and reading,
and cruelty and suffering as endured by Jews under the Nazis.
Max is adopted by Liesel's foster family, who put their own lives in danger to save his. the Hubermanns
stood up for what is right. The assistance of those who can be heard is necessary for those who cannot or
will not be heard in society. Human rights must never be disregarded or disrespected. The book is a sad
and lovely story about hardship, defiance, and the power of reading.

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