How Does Shakespeare Present Relationships In Much Ado About Nothing

1763 Words8 Pages

William Shakespeare’s works have always been a reflection of how the society focused on love and how relationships influence their actions, but how much of today’s society changed based on his stories? In William Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” shows that love is a consistent drive through the characters’ actions which has caused their happiness and downfall. Shakespeare shows how the characters interact with one another based off from their personalities and how society impacted their decisions on relationships, equality, and status. Shakespeare analyzes the depiction of how equality of male and female relationships are within the play and the difference of how they are like now.
William Shakespeare’s story “Much Ado About Nothing …show more content…

In this scene, Don John and Borachio talk about the wedding of Claudio and Hero. They devise a plan to break up the marriage by having Borachio take Hero’s handmaid, Margaret, to bed and call her Hero. In the meantime, Don John will bring Claudio and witness the scene having him think that Hero is unfaithful. This scene is very crucial in the story because this is the dramatic conflict that is noticeable in Shakespeare’s stories. It shows the manipulation, deceit, and jealousy between these two men and how they use women to create tension between the main characters of the story. They show inequality and the misuse of power between the two men. Don John knows that Claudio is foolish enough to believe his lies without confronting Hero which earns a heavy heartbreak. Even though this short scene illustrates how the conflict will happen, the readers already know how the character’s emotions will follow throughout the play after Don John’s plan …show more content…

It is shown in his analysis that women were always considered lower class then men in the society which brings out the submissive side of females. The author states that “women are supposed to remain chaste and virginal. Women should be guarded by their father until they marry and they should be loyal to their husband forever after marriage.” In Shakespeare’s play, this theory is applied in Act Four when Claudio embarrasses Hero in their wedding. When Claudio accuses Hero of adultery in front of everyone, everyone looks at her in disgust because in their society a woman who betrays her husband also betrays her family as well. The insecurities and social statuses in the relationship have created an emotional instability between the two lovers which caused their downfall in the