[Draper provides historical background on English Jews and the practice of usury (money lending for interest) as they existed in Shakespeare's time to prove that the chief concern of The Merchant of Venice is conflicting economic ideals rather than race or religion. The critic argues that Shylock hates Antonio not only because he lends money interest free, but also because he denigrates Shylock's profession and thwarts his business. According to Draper, Shakespeare is merely representative of his age when he idealistically compares Antonia's Christian business ethic with Shylock's more rigid and unforgiving value system. This fundamental distinction, the critic concludes, reflects "the difficult transition from the medieval economic system to modem capitalism" which was occurring in Elizabethan England.]
The character portrayal of Shakespeare shows the widest human sympathy, but Shylock is an exception. He is an.....
This is a free excerpt of 135 words. This section contains 2,457 words. This
study guide contains 64,979 words (approx. 217 pages at 300
words per page).
Read the rest of this Literature Guide with our The Merchant of Venice Access Pass.