@article{article_460924, title={FEMALE PARTICIPATION IN THE STATE IN MUSTAPHA AND MACBETH: A HEGELIAN APPROACH}, journal={Firat University Journal of Social Sciences}, volume={28}, pages={97–107}, year={2018}, DOI={10.18069/firatsbed.460924}, author={Şahin Gülter, İşıl}, keywords={Elizabeth Dönemi Tiyatrosu,Hegel,Hürrem Sultan,Lady Macbeth,Devlet}, abstract={<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top:6.0pt;margin-right:0cm;margin-bottom:0cm; margin-left:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-align:justify;text-indent:19.85pt; line-height:normal"> <span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:10.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif">Queen Elizabeth’s reign informs dramatists to deal with the themes of power and politics in this era, since the sovereign’s gender is one of the fundamental social and political considerations of Elizabethan period. The English display an ambivalent reaction to the idea of woman ruler, as a ruler is always identified with masculinity. Queen Elizabeth’s reign arouses a vague anxiety among the English people who perceive an inherent danger within female rule. In this context, this study aims to analyze perception of inherent danger within female rule in Fulke Greville’s <i>Mustapha </i> (1594) and W. Shakespeare’s <i>Macbeth </i> (1606) by focusing on the representation of female participation in state affairs in the light of Hegel’s construction of the state. According to Hegel, nature assigns man to the state, and woman to the family; man maintains his power in public affairs while the woman is expected to fulfill the responsibility of training children to be citizens of the state rather than participating in public affairs. In <i> Mustapha </i>, Greville sets his play in the Ottoman state and depicts Rossa (Hurrem Sultan) as an ambitious, manipulative, and intriguing character. Similarly in <i>Macbeth </i>, Shakespeare stages Lady Macbeth as a power-hungry and intriguing character. Rossa (Hurrem Sultan) and Lady Macbeth’s preference of political to familial is depicted as unnatural by their nature that results in disorder for the state. This study aims to demonstrate that Greville and Shakespeare represent female participation in the state as a disruptive force in the light of Hegel’s construction of the state. <o:p> </o:p> </span> </p>}, number={2}, publisher={Fırat Üniversitesi}