Taming of the Shrew is a story about a woman named Katherine who cannot be tamed. The play begins with two men willing to court a young woman named Bianca. But her father is not able to send Bianca off to wed until her older sister, Katherine, is married. The two men devise a clever plan, involving a couple outside people, for one of them to pretend to be a tutor for Bianca, while they set Katherine up with a man who could suit her, and tame her, it would seem. The recurring theme in Taming of the Shrew would be the gender stereotypes that present itself throughout. This situations set off a somewhat exciting and quite hilarious work by William Shakespeare.
“What, with my tongue in your tail?” Petruchio, the man found to try and tame Katherine, is, in this scene, trying to do just that. I chose this quote because it reveals a lot of things about the play and the characters themselves. This play was written for the peasants. These people were not interested in calm, or dainty plays, that royalty would be more interested in, but rather those that could make them laugh and were inappropriate to boot. In that day, plays were put on, and you had that one chance to make the audience like what you have created for them, and it did no harm in going all out. Throughout this entire scene, Katherine and Petruchio are making shots at each other, both vulgar and rude. This quote shows just how far not only the characters went to make each other uncomfortable, and fight with each other—but also the kind of humor that Shakespeare was trying to convey to the audience. It also gains insight into the characters. Katherine is the exact opposite of what a lady should be. She is rude and disrespectful of them an trying to woo her, or any other man, really. She talks of cocks and being withered, and he shoots back with somewhat witty remarks (though she claims him to be witless).

This image shows the scene that I was talking about before. It shows Petruchio in love with Katherine, and trying to woo her over through the means of hugging her and kissing her and mocking her. Katherine, however, will not be swayedby these means, as one can tell by the look on her face. I chose this because it's clear how the actors are conveying their feelings for one another.
(http://bradweismann.blogspot.com/2010/07/abbondanza-csfs-taming-of-shrew.html)
Questions:
1) What do you feel about how Katherine acts and composes herself?
2) If you were Petruchio, how would you have composed yourself?
3) Do you think it was fair that Katherine has to be married off before Bianca? Why or why not?
4) How do gender stereotypes play a role in Taming of the Shrew?
5) How do you think the power dynamics from men to women and women to men change in this play if they do at all?
Overall, I very much enjoyed Taming of the Shrew. Although it was difficult to understand, it was witty and clever, and also provided something other than the proper scenes from Shakespeare that I have seen before. I found the taming scene particularly interesting (quote above), and found that, overall, it was a wonderful piece of work, mastered by Shakespeare like no other.
[Please note that this was done last night at about 8:00 or so, but that my limited internet capabilities did not allow me to actually post it until just this morning. :)]