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MAMIROV M KURS ISHI DOC

Conclusion III


From Sidney's day down to at least the early eighteenth century, the discourse of history featured certain elements of practice that suggested that fictional material would be tolerated even within putatively “scientific” historical discourse or that fiction could be used as a means of historical representation. These elements of practice included sharp polemic; traditional material tolerated within historical texts despite its fabulous character; gossip and hearsay; rhetorical battles with other historians; the taste for strange things; the habit of telling history from the point of view of a far from disinterested individual; and the capacity of certain historical texts to press against the boundary between history and fiction. Thus the seventeenth century was indeed, as Michael McKeon has argued, a time of “categorial instability,” and this unsettled state of affairs was reflected in both fictional and historical discourse. I have shown that in the course of his career as a writer Defoe produced works that participated in both of these discursive formations, arguing, more specifically, that in presenting works initially situated within the discourse of history he came to have a revolutionary impact upon fictional discourse. As a result, Defoe's narratives played a key part in that series of developments that eventuated in a shift in the horizon of expectations of early modern readers that pointed toward the emergence of a discourse of the novel. William Shakespeare is an author, who elegantly alerts the society to the issues in women's studies and gender philosophy. Shakespeare’s comedies show that there was a clear borderline between men and women. Responsibilities of men and women were strictly divided at that time. Shakespeare dealt with every issue which was burning question of the time, also he recognized the issues which were not even considered to be existed. Gender is socially learned behaviors that are attached to the sexes, which ultimately leads to Gender Roles. Gender roles in As You Like It and The merchant of Venice prove to be quite enigmatic in Shakespearean comedy. Shakespeare highlights the difference between reality and delusion. Rosalind exemplifies the vulnerability of love that leads to a happy, harmonious living.

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