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    Othello's Flaws Essay

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    the play‚ to less than tragic stature. To what extent do you agree/ disagree with this statement? The Shakespearean play highlights the tragic hero Othello’s faults that do in fact reduce him‚ however they do not the lessen the credibility of the play’s tragic structure. It is through the influence of the characters in the play that the Othello’s fault are revealed and thus lead to the downfall of a tragic hero. Uncovered in the play are Othello’s tragic flaws‚ which include jealously

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    Tragic Hero

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    Nolan Nye Ms. Smith CP English 10 1 March 2014 Tragic Hero In Shakespeare’s play "Julius Caesar"‚ there are deaths‚ tragedies‚ and of course‚ a tragic hero. A tragic hero is a person of noble birth with heroic or potentially heroic qualities. In order to be identified as a tragic hero‚ a character must have at least one fatal flaw. Throughout the play a few main characters present themselves as possibilities for being the tragic hero‚ like Ceasar for example‚ but there really is only one person

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    gatsby

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    Alyssa White  The Great Gatsby Essay  5th Hour  The Great Gatsby    “Then  wear the gold  hat‚ if that will move her; If you can bounce high‚ bounce for her  too‚  Till  she  cry  “Lover‚  gold­hatted‚  high  bouncing  lover‚  I  must  have  you!”   (Fitzgerald‚  1925)  This quote  in  the  beginning  of  the  novel summarizes entirely the whole book  in just a  sentence. The Great Gatsby  is  a  novel  about  a hopeless  romantic‚ Jay  Gatsby‚ who attempts  to  attains  the  woman  back  that 

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    Oedipus Flaws

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    Another flaw of Oedipus that leads to his self-destruction is his excessive self-pride. He made it his mission to find the killer of Laius in order to end the misery that the plague in Thebes caused. He was sure of himself that he will save the land‚ ironically not realizing that he is the one at fault. He sees himself as being all mighty since he presumably escaped his fate. He was able to save Thebes from the Sphinx so he thinks history can repeat itself and he can be a hero ones again for his

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    Flaws In Othello

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    In the play‚ “Othello”‚ Shakespeare writes not only about the love between men and women‚ but exposes the character traits and flaws that are particularly vulnerable to the smooth talking of the archetypal devil or villain‚ Iago. Throughout the play we see and hear how the manipulation of character traits that we all possess can play out in all sorts of relationships.  With each character‚ Shakespeare explores the possible outcomes for any person if he or she were to ‘feed’ that part of themselves

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    Truth or Flaw? In every play or book that a person reads the characters are never perfect. They always have a flaw that causes a problem or conflict within the storyline. This is true for Hamlet’s character in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. In several of Hamlet’s speeches he discloses many flaws in his character to the readers throughout the play. These are aspects that have thus far only been able to be seen as fragments in other speeches. One of Hamlet’s most renowned traits is his

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    tragic heroes

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    Hamlet and Oedipus as Tragic Heroes The term “tragic hero” is usually defined by one of the most important characters throughout a Greek or Roman play. Both plays Hamlet and Oedipus are both tragedies‚ because they display a conflict between the protagonist and a superior force which is their destiny. Having a distressed or catastrophic conclusion that leads to pity or terror. A tragic hero always acts exactly on his or her own emotions; thus aiding their tragic flaw and leading to their own demise

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    Romeo's Flaws Essay

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    be a “perfect man” by the people of Verona. He was born into aristocracy‚ and all the attributes one would consider flawless. However‚ when it came to his relationship with love‚ he had many weaknesses. The tragic death of Romeo and Juliet and their ill-fated love was led about by Romeo’s flaws. Not quite yet a full grown man‚ Romeo was still a teenager who had not yet been fully exposed to the world. Being born and raised in aristocracy‚ he would have be shaded from the harsh reality of the world

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    Tragic Hero

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    2010 Tragic Hero Usually when reading‚ tragedy and conflict is the most popular way to catch the readers eye. People are attracted to the suffering of the main character who is most of the time the hero in Greek plays. To begin with‚ the audience develops an emotional attachment to the hero‚ people fear what may occur to the hero and end up feeling sorry for him or her. In the Theban Plays the author Sophocles uses the character of Oedipus to demonstrate the qualities of a tragic hero.

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    Tragic hero

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    The ideal tragic hero‚ according to Aristotle‚ should be‚ in the first place‚ a man of eminence. The actions of an eminent man would be ‘serious‚ complete and of a certain magnitude’‚ as required by Aristotle. Further‚ the hero should not only be eminent but also basically a good man‚ though not absolutely virtuous. The sufferings‚ fall and death of an absolutely virtuous man would generate feelings of disgust rather than those of ‘terror and compassion’ which a tragic play must produce. The hero

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