in its construction; in performance it can at times seem riotous and out of control‚ and yet the structure of the play shows a clear interest in symmetry and patterning. My intention is to examine Shakespeare’s concords and discords in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Shakespeare’s use of these musical terms‚ concordance and discordance‚ puts in mind a famous quote of his: “If music be the food of love‚ play on‚” This was written soon after AMSND‚ around 1600‚ and the idea of music being the sustaining
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Unlike A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ each of the cross-dressing characters does so as the result of conscious decision (as opposed to magical influence) and in order to attain a goal. While there are certainly a number of disguises in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” there are different motivations for characters wearing them. For Viola‚ her reasons for dressing as a young man are clear since she wants to be able to make a living in the new land she has found herself inhabiting. Although it may be a bit
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CHARACTER TRAIT 1 PARAGRAPH Whatever Helena sees or hears always has something to do with herself in her eyes‚ that’s how the world is like a mirror to her. Helena proves herself to be self absorbed more than once throughout the play. During her soliliquy; in act one‚ scene one; Helena explains what she plans to do with the new information that has come to light. This information being that Hermia and Lysander were going to run away together. Her plan is to “...go tell him of fair Hermia’s flight”
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The story of Pyramus and Thisbe offers a very subtle return to a couple of the main elements of A Midsummer Night’s Dream: lovers caught up in misunderstanding and sorrow enhanced by the darkness of night. Like the main story of the outer play‚ the inner play consists of a tragic premise made comical by the actors. The craftsmen’s unintentionally goofy portrayal of the woe of Pyramus and Thisbe makes the melodramatic romantic entanglements of the young Athenian lovers seem even more comical. However
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In A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ Shakespeare portrays the plays female characters in two different lights. While late 16th century English women were expected to become wives and mothers‚ A Midsummer Night’s Dream does not adhere to the set gender roles of the time. This can be seen through the character of Hermia who is a daring and strong willed female that transcends established norms. On the other‚ the character Helena represents desperate and submissive females‚ which were more commonplace than
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The Plantagenets are the perfect example of a dysfunctional family and the more you read into the play the more it is shown. Firstly the roots to a happy and healthy family are from the relationship with the parents and in no case does Henry and Eleanor have a healthy relationship. With Eleanor being sent away for several years Henry chose apon himself to have a mistress whom is Alais‚ in which is the girl that him and Eleanor rose since she was a child. With Henry having a mistress it causes many
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Brent Barcelo Mrs. Canady AP Language and Composition 08 10 11 William Shakespeare “A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Act I and II” Starting on Act 1‚ tensions and problems already begin to introduce themselves. It all begins with love and war. With the audience wanting Demetrius‚ Lysander‚ Hermia‚ and Helena to be separated lovers‚ the author places both Demetrius and Lysander to love Hermia instead of Helena. I consider this unbalanced love with a happy ending. The reason why I say this is because
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Through Shakespeare’s play “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” and Lasse Hallstrom’s film “Chocolat”‚ the composers have proposed similar perceptions on both the role of women in society and magic through the context and the relationships each character shares with the surrounding societies. Both texts use characters to signify the role of women in society and the struggles of overcoming patriarchy and strict moral code in a sustained society. Each composer’s purpose was to bring forward a response to
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I am personally not a big fan of Shakespeare although by reviewing the play A Midsummer night’s dream‚ I’m starting to like Shakespeare’s different ideas and how most of his writing and plays involve falling in love and such. This play is mostly about four couples falling in love with the wrong person because they were potioned by a magic fairy in a forest. The setting of this play mostly took place at a forest and the time was night when the play reached its climax. In the beginning of the
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The context in which a text is placed changes its purpose and allows it to be interpreted in a variety of ways. The function‚ perspective and audience of the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelly differs greatly to the film Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein by Kenneth Branagh in many ways. Importantly‚ Kenneth Branagh’s film was made for a more contemporary audience‚ reflecting modern concerns where as Frankenstein the novel was written in the context of the 18th century and dealt with the questions at that
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