William Shakespeare is very intentional about character choices and their personalities. Each character plays an important role in setting the tragedy in motion. For this essay, I have chosen to analyze Tybalt, the Friar, and Benvolio’s personalities and explain how they contributed to the tragedies.…
The ways the movie She’s The Man is similar to the play Twelfth Night are both talk about gender roles and how it effects society. As shown, when Viola in She’s The Man…
Juliet’s personality and character is one of the most obvious and significant element that has been recontextualised. In Shakespeare’s play, Juliet is described to be more than just a pretty face; she’s smart, witty, determined and mature. She knows what she wants, and she gets it as it is Juliet who proposes to Romeo not the other way around. In the text, she is written to be thirteen years of age and begins the play as a naïve child who has thought little about love and marriage, but she grows up quickly upon falling in love with Romeo. Being a girl from a high social class family, she has none of the freedom Romeo has to roam around the city or climb over walls at midnight. However she shows amazing courage in trusting her life and future to Romeo, refusing to believe the worst reports about him and even willing to shut important people out of her life (nurse) the moment they turn against Romeo. "And when I shall die, take him and cut him up in little stars, and he will make the face of heaven so fine that the entire world will fall in love with night and pay no worship to the garish sun." Juliet’s role in society is very minor and simple. She is the pretty, ‘prized’ daughter of the Capulets and is expected to be obedient of men in their families. In the novel, she receives little guidance and help from her family and is expected to marry Paris as her father decided. This gives a clear example of women’s role and its unimportance.…
Wisely and slow, they stumble that run fast” (Shakespeare 2.3.99). This quote by Friar Lawrence in William Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, perfectly sums up two different types of relationships. One of which is represented by Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet, who run fast into their love even though their families have a seemingly unending feud. They attempt to keep their relationship secret, which causes complications and ultimately ends in their death that barriers their families feud. A similar, but slower, relationship, which is the second type, is formed as a friendship between Lennie and George, in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, who are ranch hands that end up working on a farm in the Salinas Valley. They spend the majority of their lives together, George, small and smart, and Lennie, bigger but less intelligent, until trouble with a man on the ranch named Curley and his wife leads to George killing Lennie. When the two texts are compared, George and Lennie have a stronger relationship, because they always care for each other, they have trust, and their relationship is based off of friendship, while on the other hand Romeo and Juliet’s relationship is developed off of regretted actions, infatuation, and empty words.…
Even though people have lived in different eras or different places, some things never change and continue to stay the same, such as qualities of people. Women in completely different time periods have displayed the same character traits when faced with similar situations. These situations are similar because of the reaction they trigger from these independent women. In Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Juliet reflected qualities of leadership when faced with a difficult situation and in Homer’s The Odyssey, Penelope also showed similar qualities when in hardship. These stories are not related in any way, nor were they written closely together within the same era. This proves that emotions and character traits will always be the same, because people teach their children right and wrong and what is deemed by society as the correct moral values. It doesn’t matter where you are in the world, or what time you lived; morals are still morals a million miles away. Penelope and Juliet, though both characters are from completely different stories and eras, they are similar because they both displayed qualities of strength and courage during times of despair.…
In this scene Shakespeare presents the relationship between Romeo and Juliet as a tragedy. I can tell this because it says ‘I must be gone and live’. This shows that Romeo knows he might die if he stays but he is choosing to stay to see Juliet. It also shows how much they love each other as Romeo is showing he would die for Juliet. By using the image of death, it shows that the story might become a tragedy. By including hints towards a tragedy, it keeps the audience interested. It also shows how bitter the feud is between the two families.…
Juliet’s perspective of love, marriage and relationships have changed throughout Romeo and Juliet. At the beginning of the play Juliet never thought about love or marriage and never considered love or marriage, for when her parents told her that they want her to marry Paris she asked how can I love someone if I don’t even know him. “I have never dreamed about marriage.” When Juliet’s family had a party Romeo snuck in and when Juliet saw him, she told the nurse that he is cute and she thinks she fell in love with Romeo at first sight. When Romeo started to sneak out and see Juliet the would talk about how they like each other but Juliet is still be cautious because she doesn’t know if they are going to feel about each other overnight, but the…
Sometimes, a person or people are given blame or credit for things they did not cause. This is true in life as well as in fiction. The story of Romeo and Juliet is a good example of this. Too often Romeo and Juliet are blamed for their deaths and the deaths of others in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, as well as given credit for ending the Capulet and Montague feud. Friar Laurence had the largest impact on ending the Capulet and Montague rivalry by encouraging their love, through his influence of the characters based on their trust in him, and because his plan led to Romeo and Juliet’s deaths.…
In the story Romeo and Juliet, the male characters have a more dramatic effect on the story, with characters like Tybalt, Romeo, and Paris there's a never ending conflict that constantly leaves you wondering what's going to happen next, and always leaves you guessing who's what male character is going to start the next page turning conflict that makes Romeo and Juliet such a great…
"Responsibility is accepting that you are the cause and the solution of the matter." This is a quote that would really get Friar Lawrence thinking about what he did in Romeo and Juliet. All of the negative things that happened in Romeo and Juliet happened because of the decisions and actions of Friar Lawrence.…
Romeo and Juliet are two lovers during the Great Depression living in Georgia. Romeo comes from a wealthy family, whereas Juliet is from a formerly rich family who lost all their money in the stock market crash. They met in a diner where Juliet was with her friends and family. Romeo’s family disagrees with marrying someone so poor, so they are banned from seeing each other. Juliet is poor: she wears old hand-me-downs from her mom, and has long brown hair with mismatched shoes. Romeo is rich and wears formal outfits and nice clothing; his hair is cut short and slicked down. The scene with Lord Capulet yelling at Juliet for denying Paris takes place in their trailer home. Paris is the son of a local factory owner, and has a chance on making steady income.…
Furthermore, our protagonist, Romeo, masculinity is questioned throughout the play. For example: Romeo fears that his love for Juliet softened him, “ Thy beauty hath made me effeminate/And in my temper soften’d valour’s steel” (Shakespeare 111.i.). Secondly,…
In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, young love consumes Romeo on a roller coaster of contrasting emotions from agonizing heartbreak to immense jubilation in the blink of an eye. Romeo aches for his first love Rosaline, who tears his heart out of his body generating Romeo to feel a gaping hole in his chest and heaps of depression. As well as this, Romeo soon after discovers cheerfulness in encountering his second love Juliet, a physically attractive women, and will proceed through anything to prove his undying magical love for her.…
Stephen Evans’ “Study guide for Romeo and Juliet” quotes Anthony Fletcher’s definition of patriarchy as: “the institutionalised male dominance over women and children in the family and the subordination of women in society in general (xv)” (Evans, 4) Looking at this definition, Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet displays examples of “patriarchy” in many ways. While Fletcher’s definition focuses on women and children there can be an argument that, from cradle to grave, all members of Verona’s society are subject to the male-dominated patriarchy in one form or another. By studying the familial structure of the major players, the social roles of the populace, the hierarchical structure of leadership, and the interactions between each, the motif is a very dominate one.…
With great power comes responsibility. The power to manipulate people is especially powerful. Friar Laurence has that exact power, the ability to manipulate two young, lover sick teenagers named Romeo & Juliet written by the world renown William Shakespeare. The two of them seek help from the Friar Laurence and he comes up with a plan to fake Juliet's death and shortly after, have Romeo save Juliet from the family tomb and live happily ever after with each other. Unfortunately, Romeo is received fake information that Juliet has actually died. Romeo becomes completely mad and goes to Juliet's tomb to send his last few minutes with her before committing suicide. Juliet wakes up immediately after Romeo has committed suicide and commits suicide…