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    cause of many a down fall. William Shakespeare has single handedly captured and embraced this necessary feeling and has allowed us to view in on it through the characters in his two masterpieces‚ Othello and King Lear. Three different kinds of loves explored in both Othello and King Lear‚ sharing both similarities and differences are a love for a significant other‚ the love a father holds to his children‚ and the love a daughter holds for her father. By looking at the outcomes of these loves one

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    !1 ! Selfhood: The Need for External Acknowledgement in Shakespeare’s King Lear “The impermanence of power and place. That man had it all‚ but only for a time.”1   --James Baker ! In William Shakespeare’s King Lear‚ the dialog in the hovel between Lear and Edgar‚ disguised as the mad beggar Poor Tom‚ represents the pivotal moment in Lear’s path to redemption through self-discovery. Lear’s path to self-discovery begins when he experiences a psychological struggle over the loss of

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    King Lear was once a powerful and mighty king‚ but is also a multi-faceted character who has weaknesses and flaws. Throughout the play the reader’s perception of Lear is constantly changing. In the beginning of the play King Lear is seen as a powerful monarch‚ but as the play goes on he becomes a character deserving of pity. In the beginning of the play and in the time before the play‚ King Lear was a formidable ruler with three daughters‚ Goneril‚ Reagan‚ and Cordelia. One day Lear decides he

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    Gloucester asserts as a father is parallel to the power King Lear has. Power is an important theme within the play because many of the characters abuse their power and use power as a tool for manipulation and control‚ other characters on the other hand‚ desire power and authority but ultimately power corrupts all.

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    Shakespeare’s King Lear is still popular today specifically for the reasons that he has been able to capture common human emotions and that themes which are still relevant today are involved in his play‚ for these reasons I believe that Shakespeare has been able to successfully transcend time and be praised as a timeless classic. First of all‚ the English language has evolved dramatically since Shakespearian time however‚ human nature has not and therefore‚ the relatability to emotions exposed in King Lear

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    In this production of Shakespeare’s King Lear‚ a feminist reading of the play has been chosen to be presented to the audience. Certain important factors must be taken into consideration as to how this reading will be reflected on stage. Thus‚ we will examine‚ in detail‚ two important scenes: Act I‚ scene i‚ and Act IV‚ scene iv‚ their impact on the action and main issues of the play (ambition/ greed‚ power‚ corruption‚ appearance versus reality and growth through suffering) and how the characters

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    King Lear – Act 1 Scene 1: 1. In what way does Learn disrupt the Great Chain of Being? What is his motivation? What is his hamartia? What is his fatal flaw? How would this affect his knowledge and understanding of others such as his daughters and Kent? Lear disrupts the Great Chain of Being when he revokes his position at the top of the Great Chain. Lear was lazy (his hamartia) and was also excessively proud. This excessive pride leads to the deterioration of his father-daughter relationships

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    of their characters‚ I chose King Lear as one who reveals to me the most surprising and unexpected in the scenes through soliloquies and monologues.   First of all‚ it is important to know a brief history of King Lear. He is an aging man who is loyal and a father that is loving to his daughters. Lear is identified as very generous especially when he tends to give away most of his responsibilities as a king to his daughters. As innocent and clueless as he is‚ king Lear simply becomes shocked and upset

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    betrayal‚ King Lear also exhibits the same emotion and similarities to that of Edmund. Both

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    imperfection but plain moral evil" (A. C. Bradley 689). In King Lear‚ evil takes its core power from greediness and ingratitude of king ’s two daughters‚ Goneril and Regan. Their intentions and deliberate actions are pure evil‚ "Beneath is all the fiend ’s. There ’s hell‚ there ’s darkness‚ there is the sulphurous pit…" (4.6. 143-144). The reason why the two sisters praise their father in the beginning of the play is justified by their desire to inherit Lear ’s kingdom and supremacy. Goneril ’s and Regan ’s

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