Melisa Pierre-Louis Professor Brett English 10 December 2nd, 2016 A Midsummer Night’s Dream Annotated essay. A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare is a comedy that contains a lot of aspects. They communicate in one way or another to the audience, depending on how we (the audience) analyze what Shakespeare is trying to convey.
In the play, Irony is used to communicate
Southern Colonies Geography: flat, good fertile soil, long growing season for crops, warm tempatures. To the East is is the Alantic ocean and to the west is the Appalachian mountains. Religion: religious freedom motivated many to settle in colonies. English Catholics founded Maryland, Tolerence act supported tolerence among Christian faiths. Economy: agricultral, plantations, cash crops play a big role in the economy.
In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Helena thinks that both Demetrius, Lysander, and Hermia are all playing a prank on her by making Demetrius and Lysander act like they love her. Helena delivers a monologue where she is accusing Hermia of being in on the prank. In Helena's monologue, Shakespeare portrays her character as a hurt, confused, and sad friend. Shakespeare cultivates this character through the use of accusatory and negative diction, symbolism, and similes.
For this close reading assignment, I analyze the first passage of the handout from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. As I read the passage I noticed immediately some different literary device and structures that I will unpack and explain throughout this short essay. I will mainly analyze the rhyming structure and the vivid imagery and descriptive words that Shakespeare uses in the passage; as well as what I think is achieved by the use of those devices. Starting right from the beginning I noticed an interesting rhythmic structure throughout the passage, the rhyming couplets of this passage suggest to me that it could be performed in a steady moderate or a vigorous pace.
Julie Taymor’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream film adaptation creates a fantastical spin on the well-known Shakespeare play. The director is able to create an effective dream-like setting with the use of projections, lighting, and puppetry. From the beginning, there is a sense of wonder created, as without word or introduction, Puck, played by Kathryn Hunter, glides onto stage and lays down on a mattress supported by branches. Puck is then lifted into the air and a large white sheet consumes the stage. Even for those familiar with the play, such as myself, it immediately commands your mind to travel to the dream world Taymor has created.
Throughout both plays, dramatic irony is used to portray the protagonists as tragic heroes and deliver their meanings as a whole. The heroes are not necasarilly aware of these events of dramatic irony, but they are apparent to the audience. One example is when Oedipus refused to believe Teiresias the blind prophet about the truth of his actions and the prophecy. Oedipus called him a “… sightless, witless, senseless, mad old man,” when ironically Oedipus , “with both [his] eyes”, was the one blind to the prophecy and the severity of his actions (Act1.
This is the first example of dramatic irony, which in this play happens mostly because of the difference in time periods of when the play was set and
Two major approaches when studying bystander behaviour are discourse analysis and experimental method. Latané & Darley and Levine have contributed to psychological study into this matter, using these different methods of experimentation to reach conclusions regarding the bystander effect. This essay will begin by describing the different uses of evidence in both methods. Furthermore, it will discuss what these methods have in common, for they equally attempt to understand why bystander behaviour occurs, and the reasons that they differ. It will examine why each method is a useful way of analysing human behaviour, and the similarities in the limited demographics used by these particular psychologists.
Puck and Bottom: Different but Alike There are two characters in A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Puck and Bottom. They are funny, and they bring a great amount of comic relief to the play. They do have their differences, however. Bottom is an artisan while Puck is a fairy.
The dramatic irony plays a huge role throughout the play, especially in wrapping up the
Dramatic irony : the audience knows more than the characters on stage • Act 1, Scene 5, lines 149-187 • Hamlet’s his two friends Horatio and Marcellus swear that they must not reveal what they have just seen and heard. We sympathize with Hamlet who has decided to "put an antic disposition on" (to pretend madness) to deceive the others and not reveal his true feelings or future plan of revenging his father's death. Dramatic irony results because only we and his friends Marcellus and Horatio know that he is only pretending to be mad. f. Soliloquy: to revel (interior) thoughts, problems, decision making process of character.
Dramatic irony grabs the attention of the audience by adding more suspense. Soliloquies let the audience know the feelings and thoughts of a character, making them more attentive. Allusions give the audience something to think about and this makes them feel more involved. Overall, William Shakespeare’s marvelous job of the use of literary devices in The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet will add to his legacy, not to forget, the title of greatest English-playwright does him
John tells the truth but Elizabeth lies to protect him which is ironic because He told the court she would never lie. John refuses to sign the confession to protect his family name and the people that look up to him, this event helps dramatize the play. Finally, Elizabeth living to the court and John not signing the confession lead to his death which dramatizes the play because of the death of the protagonist. Throughout the play I explained how this ironic event in the play dramatizes the
The use and misuse of magic are of great importance in the play, A Midsummer Night 's Dream. It is a recurring theme that is mostly seen with Puck. The use of magic by Puck helps in creating conflict, humor, and balance in play. Shakespeare employs this device in his play to mainly build and establish the theme of love. The role of magic in A Midsummer Night’s Dream is seen as an interference with the human world, however it is still separate from the human protagonists (Noone, 2010).