English, asked by saniaali84, 5 months ago

what are the insults faced by shylock in Rialto​

Answers

Answered by shilpivishvakarma
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

As he calculate the interest on bassanio's laon shylock remembers the many time that Antonio has spot on him and called him as a dog and insulted him for lending money for profit .

Answered by farruminoo
1

Answer:

Both Antonio and Shylock have had business dealings in the past. Shylock claims that Antonio has spit on him, called him a dog, and insulted him for lending money for profit.

He hath disgraced me and hindered me half a million, laughed at my losses, mocked at my gains, scorned my nation, thwarted my bargains, cooled my friends, heated mine enemies—and what’s his reason?

Shylock says his famous lines about how a Jew is no different than a Christian,

I am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?

Explanation:

Antonio insults Shylock in several ways.  He calls him a "cur" which is a dog, and he does it in public in front of other businessmen upon whom Shylock depends for his own livelihood. He curses Shylock's religion and ethnicity by mocking him and consistently mentioning what he sees as idiosyncrasies of Judaism.  Most significantly, he spits on Shylock in front of others, demonstrating his disdain for the usurer.

Shylock seems to give the most weight to being called a "cur," most likely because of the dehumanization that such an insult suggests.

                   (or)

The nearest that Shylock comes to being a sympathetic character in The Merchant of Venice is in act 3, scene 1, when he recounts the litany of grievances he has against Antonio. Antonio's generally presented as an all-round nice guy, so when Shylock shows us a less savory side to his personality, we're more than a little shocked. As well as spitting at him and calling him a cur, Antonio, according to Shylock, has laughed at his every setback while also cursing his good fortune. Not only that, but he's guilty of stirring up Shylock's enemies while turning his friends against him.

Like most Christians at the time, Antonio regards usury—lending money at interest, which is what Shylock does for a living—as a most grievous sin. So he feels perfectly entitled to insult Shylock to his face, even though he didn't really have much choice in making his living this way, as money-lending was one of the few professions open to Jews at that time. By the same token, Antonio also has no qualms about insulting Shylock's religion. Anti-Semitism was rife at this time, and there will have been nothing unusual in Antonio's behavior in this regard.

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