This paper will compare and contrast the ways people interacted with each other in the sixteenth-century Europe, nineteenth-century England, and the 1950 s in the United States. The paper will state how people were introduced to one another, expressed their sexual feelings, and meeting on casual acquaintances. The next three paragraphs will talk about what happened during the time periods. This will maybe tell why people behaved that way during that time period.
Then the comparing and contrasting of how people interacted will be explored. Finally, I will conclude with summary of my findings. During the Renaissance Italy, unlike England and France, had no main capital city. Instead it had many centers for regional states. Some of these cities were Milan, Rome, Venice, and Florence. Other Renaissance culture developed around Mantua and Urbino.
During the 15 th century students came from all over Europe to study in Italy. Also during the Renaissance Italian literature, clothing, furniture, and art were imitated in Holland, France, Germany, Spain and England (Renaissance 30).
In the nineteenth-century England and Wales we redivided into fifty-two counties. In this century the English hunted foxes (Pool 24).
The middle of London, known as “The City”, dropped from one hundred twenty-eight thousand to fifty thousand, while the rest of London grew from one million to four and a half million. In London the fancy area was the West End. The East End was full of poverty and misery (Pool 28).
The 1950 s, which followed World War II, were part of the Truman Years and Eisenhower Years. In 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy insisted that there were conspiracies in the Federal Government.
During this decade there was a huge population increase from one hundred fifty million to one hundred seventy-nine million. The United States court also rid itself of racial discrimination. Also, in 1954 ruled that racial discrimination in schools was unconstitutional (History of the United States 67-68).
While the sixteenth-century was different from the nineteenth-century there were some similarities. There were intermarriages between people that were not in the same class (Hale 444).
For example in Our Mutual Friend Eugene, a gentleman, marries Lizzy, a boat girl. Romeo, a Capulet, and Juliet, a Montague rival also marry even though they were of opposing families (Shakespeare 337).
Also sex was thought about much. In Romeo and Juliet, after the Capulet party Mercutio teases Romeo about Rosaline in a sexual way (Shakespeare 319).
Jenny Wren thought Eugene W rayburn just wanted to make Lizzy He xem his “doll” (OMF).
Of course as people change there was a change in behavior in love.
Before the 18 th century love wasn’t expected to end well (Hatfield 7).
Romeo drank poison and Juliet stabbed herself (Shakespeare 389-390).
Eugene and Lizzy though were married and lived happily (OMF).
Love was acquired very fast during the Victorian compared to the nineteenth-century. In a single day, Monday, Romeo and Juliet were married, fell in love, and were together all night (Shakespeare 318-358).
It took Eugene to attract Lizzy to him a while (actually Headstone had to beat the crap out of Eugene) (OMF).
The 1950 s followed two World Wars and because of the time soldiers spent away they probably missed being with their sweethearts and families, but because history repeats itself there are some similarities between the Victorian era and the 1950 s. After 1800 lust and tenderness grew more tightly connected (Hatfield 86).
In Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Holly Go lightly mentions that she slept with numerous partners. Mercutio talks about Romeo having sex with Rosaline in Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare during Act 2. The similarity is that they both involve sex.
Also people were married at a very young age. Holly married Doc at the age of fourteen (Capote).
Juliet married Romeo at the age of thirteen (Shakespeare 298).
This shows that they were to young to even fully think about marriage, although life expectancy for Juliet was very short. Of course, like I said, people change and because of the absence of soldiers’s weet hearts lust and longing for them probably grew. Holly was a famous person and she like the rich people (Capote).
Juliet and Romeo’s families were of opposite sides which made them unable to make much contact with each other due to their social statuses. Also in the past women weren’t allowed to go around without an escort unless she was old (Pool 55).
In Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s Holly goes around by herself to meet with many different people. Even the Nurse is accompanied by someone, Peter, when making errands for Juliet, like giving messages to Romeo (Shakespeare 331-332).
This hints at women equality in this difference. Those were the similarities and differences between the Renaissance, sixteenth-century, the nineteenth century and the 1950 s.
Now a recap will be done on all of my research. During the Renaissance Italy was the main point of art and literature. Italy also had no capital at that time. England in the nineteenth-century saw some increase in population, especially in London. England also was divided into 52 counties and enjoyed in fox-hunting. The 1950 s had many changes.
They had the change of fighting another World War and they stopped much of the discrimination that held colored people and women down. The sixteenth century was compared to the nineteenth-century in issues of sex and how people intermarried with a “class” different from theirs. The differences were how love ended, concluding that love in the sixteenth century didn’t end well while love in the nineteenth-century did, and how quickly they fell in love. It was kind of difficult finding similarities between the nineteenth-century and the sixteenth-century, but what I came up with was that people in the past sometimes married young and that they both had a common interest in sex. The differences were that people stayed with their own type of people in the 1950 s wasn’t as common as that of the sixteenth-century where Romeo and Juliet had trouble getting together. Those were my findings and I hope that this is seen as a well written report..