The Price of Assimilation; the Price of Alienation
The Price of Assimilation; the Price of Alienation
The Price of Assimilation; The Price of Alienation
Cultural exchange, assimilation, and the trade of ideas have never been achieved without a certain amount of resistance, usually in the form of oppression, prejudice, and genocide. Shakespeares The Merchant Of Venice explores this phenomenon in the setting of one of the most diverse cities of the age, as well as in the broader context of the time. Under the guise of international trade and courtship, Shakespeares play is really about the financial causes of xenophobia, and the consequences to which this fiscal-based fear leads.
Historically present in nearly every case of injustice imposed by one set of people on another is economic stress, or put differently, the shortage of resources. Hitler would never have had as astounding success without the bleak economics of Germany, and racism in France is most prevalent where housing is limited. Our minority house leader, Trent Lott has this to say about the outsider: “I’m highly offended when illegal people come into this country, take jobs illegally”(Fox News, May 1 2006) which clearly presents the problem of the outsider as synonymous to a threat on the economy. In short, when an economy is in danger, it is nearly always followed by a spell of great distrust and danger to anyone outside the majority, or not part of those in power.
It is no wonder then, that xenophobia flourishes in Shakespeares Venice, where merchants are terrified of losing profit, such as Salerio:
“Should I [Salerio] go to a church
and see the holy edifice of stone
and not bethink me straight of dangerous rocks,
which touching but my gentle vessels side
would scatter all her spices
but even now worth this,
and now worth nothing.” (Act 1 Scene 1, lines 30-7)
The exaggerated fear or losses indicates an extremely stressful economic situation for these young merchants. In fact, Venices economic situation seems unhappy for everyone. The young men of Venice are forced to either borrow money, or, in the case of Lorenzo, have it stolen. With all the money invested in foreign ventures, the local economy must have been tenuous at best. The Venetians, much like the British of Shakespeare time (and not unlike our own culture), were faced with a problem; they wished to globalize and gain profit from foreign trade without risking that the foreigners would demand resources and profit back. They wished to expand their boarders, yet feared including others in these boarders.
In this context, we are introduced to Shylock, a character who not only has money to spare, but exacts it from the funds of deserving others. Why can he charge interest and thereby burden the already stressed economy? Because he is different; because he follows a different set of rules regarding the accumulation of wealth among other things. As an outsider he is able to take from the citizens of Venice. It is no wonder that in this context, he is hated by the less fortunate Venetian men. The root of Antonios anti-semitism is clearly nothing more than his resentment of the economic disparity between them, translated into a broader hatred for his difference. Shylock himself recognizes this root of hatred, even making the connection between the fiscal activity and the anti-Semitic insults: “you have rated me about my moneys and my usances…you call me a misbeliever.”(Act 1 Scene 3, lines 105-9)
In her criticism of the work, Guess Whos Coming to Dinner, Kim Hall adds interesting historical information, that only serves to enforce economic stress as the root of prejudice in this play. In her first section she refers to the charity of assimilation as seen by the English. This is based in more than religious belief, but in fact. Where economic tension had given rise to prejudice, Christians alone were safe from persecution. “This sense of privation produces an economic imperative in the play, which insists on the exclusion of racial, religious, and cultural difference.” (293) Therefore, “Christianity becomes the prerequisite for access to limited resources,” (293) making conversion virtually the only license to limited resources, and conversion a charitable gift of this license.
If conversion were viewed as charity, assimilation and intermarriage must have seemed like robbery, making even those who had integrated unsafe. This phenomenon can be seen in the case of Lorenzos marriage to Jessica, which is seen as an economic threat: “he says you are no good member of the commonwealth, for in converting