Key points
The Merchant of Venice is a play by William Shakespeare that tells the story of a merchant called Antonio and a moneylender called Shylock.
Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a play. Some of the important themes in The Merchant of Venice are:
Money - the significance of wealth and how it can affect people and relationships.
Justice - the idea of what is fair and how this can differ from person to person.
Love - romantic love, family relationships and the love between friends feature in the play.
Prejudice - many characters are prejudiced against Shylock because of his Jewish faith.
Did you know?
Shakespeare often uses similar themes across his plays. For example, the theme of love is also important in Romeo and Juliet as well as in Much Ado About Nothing.
Money
Watch this video about money in The Merchant of Venice:
Money plays an important role in the play and causes lots of issues. Even the title, which refers to Antonio being a merchant, tells the audience that he makes money by trading.
At the start of the play, Antonio鈥檚 friend Bassanio does not have enough money to visit Portia as a potential suitor. He asks Antonio for help, which leads Antonio to take his ill-fated loan from Shylock.
Shylock is presented as greedy and obsessed with money because he charges high interest rates on his loans. This is an antisemitismHostility or prejudice towards Jewish people. view of Jewish people. On the other hand, when Jessica steals his ring he is more upset because it was given to him by his wife before she died rather than because of how much money it is worth.
Justice
Watch this video about justice in The Merchant of Venice:
The play makes the audience consider what is right and what is wrong. Antonio thinks that Shylock is wrong and greedy to charge such high rates of interest on loans. On the other hand, Shylock believes that Antonio only charges low interest rates to take business away from him. Shylock believes that Antonio does this because he is antisemiticHolding hostile or prejudiced views against Jewish people..
Shylock is given the chance to have his loan repaid, twice the original amount, but he still wants Antonio鈥檚 flesh. Shylock thinks this is just because it honours the contract that Antonio signed, although Shylock is also motivated by a hatred for Antonio.
Antonio is resigned to his fate because he willingly signed the contract, and agrees to give Shylock a pound of his flesh.
Portia and Antonio punish Shylock by taking away his money and pressuring him to convert to Christianity. They see this as just and fair because Shylock wanted to kill Antonio. Shylock sees this as unjust and thinks it is enough that he is being denied the money owed to him under the contract. He sees the pressure to convert to Christianity as an unfair attack on his Jewish faith.
There is prejudice towards Shylock because of his Jewish identity. This is antisemitism. It is strongly implied that Antonio dislikes Shylock because he is Jewish. He often refers to Shylock as 鈥渢he Jew鈥 and pressures him to convert to Christianity at the end of the play.
Antisemitism was common in Shakespeare鈥檚 time. It was often based on misguided religious beliefs such as Jewish people being held responsible for the death of Jesus. Hurtful and false ideas around Jews being obsessed with money and having an evil influence on society were also common. Sometimes, antisemitism resulted in Jewish people facing restrictions, being banishedTo send someone away from a country or place as a form of punishment. or murdered.
Another example of prejudice is the way women are treated differently to men. Portia has her life controlled by her late father and cannot choose who she marries. This was common in Shakespeare鈥檚 time when women did not have the same rights as men. Read more about women in Shakespeare鈥檚 England.
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